Building Energy Standards Program: Final Determination Regarding Energy Efficiency Improvements in the Energy Standard for Buildings, Except Low-Rise Residential Buildings, ANSI/ASHRAE/IESNA Standard 90.1-2010, 64904-64923 [2011-27057]
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[FR Doc. 2011–26927 Filed 10–18–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4000–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
[Docket No. EERE–2006–BC–0132]
RIN 1904–AC42
Building Energy Standards Program:
Final Determination Regarding Energy
Efficiency Improvements in the Energy
Standard for Buildings, Except LowRise Residential Buildings, ANSI/
ASHRAE/IESNA Standard 90.1–2010
Office of Energy Efficiency and
Renewable Energy, Department of
Energy.
ACTION: Notice of final determination.
AGENCY:
The Department of Energy
(DOE or Department) has determined
that the 2010 edition of the Energy
Standard for Buildings, Except Low-Rise
Residential Buildings, American
National Standards Institute (ANSI)/
American Society of Heating,
Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning
Engineers (ASHRAE) Illuminating
Engineering Society of North America
(IESNA) Standard 90.1–2010, (Standard
90.1–2010 or the 2010 edition) would
achieve greater energy efficiency in
buildings subject to the code, than the
2007 edition (Standard 90.1–2007 or the
2007 edition). Also, DOE has
determined that the quantitative
analysis of the energy consumption of
buildings built to Standard 90.1–2010,
as compared with buildings built to
Standard 90.1–2007, indicates national
source energy savings of approximately
18.2 percent of commercial building
energy consumption. Additionally, DOE
has determined site energy savings are
estimated to be approximately 18.5
percent. Upon publication of this
affirmative final determination, States
are required to certify that they have
reviewed the provisions of their
commercial building code regarding
energy efficiency, and as necessary,
updated their code to meet or exceed
Standard 90.1–2010. Additionally, this
notice provides guidance to States on
Certifications, and Requests for
Extensions of Deadlines for Certification
Statements.
SUMMARY:
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Certification statements by the
States must be provided by October 18,
2013.
ADDRESSES: Certification Statements
must be addressed to the Buildings
Technologies Program-Building Energy
Codes Program Manager, U.S.
Department of Energy, Office of Energy
Efficiency and Renewable Energy,
Forrestal Building, Mail Station EE–2J,
1000 Independence Avenue, SW.,
Washington, DC 20585–0121.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Michael Erbesfeld, U.S. Department of
Energy, Office of Energy Efficiency and
Renewable Energy, Forrestal Building,
Mail Station EE–2J, 1000 Independence
Avenue, SW., Washington, DC 20585–
0121, (202) 287–1874, e-mail:
michael.erbesfeld@ee.doe.gov. For legal
issues contact Kavita Vaidyanathan,
U.S. Department of Energy, Office of the
General Counsel, Forrestal Building,
GC–71, 1000 Independence Avenue,
SW., Washington, DC 20585, (202) 586–
0669, e-mail:
kavita.vaidyanathan@hq.doe.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
DATES:
I. Introduction
A. Statutory Requirements
B. Background
1. Publication of Standard 90.1–2010
2. Preliminary Determination
3. Public Comments Regarding the
Preliminary Determination
II. Summary of the Comparative Analysis
A. Qualitative Analysis
1. Discussion of Detailed Textual Analysis
2. Results of Detailed Textual Analysis
B. Quantitative Analysis
1. Discussion of Whole Building Energy
Analysis
2. Results of Whole Building Energy
Analysis
C. Final Determination Statement
III. Filing Certification Statements With DOE
A. Review and Update
B. Certification
C. Requests for Extensions To Certify
IV. Regulatory Analysis
A. Review Under Executive Order 12866
B. Review Under the Regulatory Flexibility
Act
C. Review Under the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969
D. Review Under Executive Order 13132,
‘‘Federalism’’
E. Review Under the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act of 1995
F. Review Under the Treasury and General
Government Appropriations Act of 1999
G. Review Under the Treasury and General
Government Appropriations Act of 2001
H. Review Under Executive Order 13211
I. Review Under Executive Order 13175
I. Introduction
A. Statutory Requirements
Title III of the Energy Conservation
and Production Act, as amended
(ECPA), establishes requirements for the
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Building Energy Efficiency Standards
Program. (42 U.S.C. 6831 et seq.)
Section 304(b), as amended, of ECPA
provides that whenever the ANSI/
ASHRAE/IESNA Standard 90.1–1989
(Standard 90.1–1989 or 1989 edition), or
any successor to that code, is revised,
the Secretary must make a
determination, not later than 12 months
after such revision, whether the revised
code would improve energy efficiency
in commercial buildings and must
publish notice of such determination in
the Federal Register. (42 U.S.C. 6833
(b)(2)(A)) The Secretary may determine
that the revision of Standard 90.1–1989
or any successor thereof, improves the
level of energy efficiency in commercial
buildings. If so, then not later than two
years after the date of the publication of
such affirmative determination, each
State is required to certify that it has
reviewed and updated the provisions of
its commercial building code regarding
energy efficiency with respect to the
revised or successor code. (42 U.S.C.
6833(b)(2)(B)(i)) The State must include
in its certification a demonstration that
the provisions of its commercial
building code, regarding energy
efficiency, meet or exceed the revised
standard. (42 U.S.C. 6833(b)(2)(B)(i))
If the Secretary makes a determination
that the revised standard will not
improve energy efficiency in
commercial buildings, State commercial
codes must meet or exceed the last
revised standard for which the Secretary
has made a positive determination. (42
U.S.C. 6833(b)(2)(B)(ii)). On July 20,
2011, the DOE published a
determination in the Federal Register
updating the reference code to Standard
90.1–2007. See 76 FR 43287 (July 20,
2011).
ECPA also requires the Secretary to
permit extensions of the deadlines for
the State certification if a State can
demonstrate that it has made a good
faith effort to comply with the
requirements of section 304(c) of ECPA
and that it has made significant progress
in doing so. (42 U.S.C. 6833(c))
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B. Background
1. Publication of Standard 90.1–2010
ASHRAE and the IESNA approved the
publication of the 2010 edition of
Energy Standard for Buildings Except
Low-rise Residential Buildings, in
October 2010.
The Standard was developed under
ANSI-approved consensus standard
procedures. Standard 90.1 is under
continuous maintenance by a Standing
Standard Project Committee (SSPC) for
which the ASHRAE Standard
Committee has established a
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documented program for regular
publication of addenda or revisions,
including procedures for timely,
documented, consensus action on
requests for change to any part of the
standard. ANSI approves addenda prior
to their publication by ASHRAE and
IESNA and prior to their inclusion in a
new version of Standard 90.1. ANSI
approved the final addendum for
inclusion in Standard 90.1–2010 on July
24, 2010. Appeals were made to several
addenda and the results of the appeals
process were not final until October 15,
2010. The 2010 edition was published
on October 28, 2010.
2. Preliminary Determination
In arriving at a preliminary
determination, DOE first reviewed all
significant changes between the 2010
edition and the 2007 edition. Standard
90.1 is complex and covers a broad
spectrum of the energy related
components and systems in buildings
ranging from simple storage buildings to
complex hospitals and laboratories. The
size of buildings addressed range from
those smaller than single family homes
to the largest buildings in the world.
The approach to development of the
standard used in the 2010 edition was
not changed from that used for the 2007
edition, with no changes to the scope or
the way components are defined. DOE
preliminarily determined that because
no significant changes were made to the
structure, scope, or component
definitions of Standard 90.1–2007, a
similar methodology used for the
analysis of Standard 90.1–2007 could be
utilized for the analysis of Standard
90.1–2010, consisting of a qualitative
comparison of the textual changes to
requirements in Standard 90.1–2010
from Standard 90.1–2007, and a
quantitative estimate of the energy
savings developed from whole building
simulations of a standard set of
buildings constructed to both Standards
over a range of U.S. climates. DOE used
an extension of the procedure used for
the Standard 90.1–2007 determination
for the quantitative estimate of energy
savings. The extension was that
additional building types were added to
the analysis. DOE used the same
simulation tool and data for weighing
the results by building type and climate
as used for the 90.1–2007
determination.
A detailed discussion of the analysis
methodology, which was subject to
public comment in 2010 and 2011, can
be found in the Notice of Preliminary
Determination for Standard 90.1–2007
and in the Notice of Preliminary
Determination for Standard 90.1–2010.
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75 FR 54117 (Sept. 3, 2010) and 76 FR
43299 (July 20, 2011) respectively.
3. Public Comments Regarding the
Preliminary Determination
DOE accepted public comments on
the preliminary determination for
Standard 90.1–2010 until August 19,
2011. DOE received submissions from a
total of six different entities.
The Edison Electric Institute (EEI)
submitted a written comment (Docket
No. EERE–2010–BT–DET–0050–0002,
pgs. 1–3) supporting the preliminary
determination while stating the
following four issues: (1) DOE should
only use the results from its site energy
analysis and its energy cost analysis to
make its final determination, and not
report the source energy analysis results
in the final determination, (2) the energy
savings, or at least a portion of the
estimated energy savings, from addenda
that include new federal energy
efficiency standards or provide updates
to energy efficiency standards should be
incorporated into the final
determination analysis, (3) EEI would
request that the information about the
impact of addendum ‘‘bu’’ be included
in the final determination notice, and
(4) in terms of primary energy
associated with electricity, the value in
this notice is overstated and that DOE
should use a more realistic ratio for
electricity in its estimates.
In regards to EEI’s first comment, the
Department still believes that despite
the fact that the source energy analysis
results are estimates, it is important to
the discussion of global resources and
environmental issues to report them.
Source energy (or primary energy)
addresses the energy needed to deliver
energy to the building in addition to the
energy used at the building and thus
provides a more complete view of the
total energy expenditure used by a
building than site energy. However,
DOE realizes that site energy is the
energy that typically appears on utility
bills and that is seen by the consumer.
DOE also realizes that it is energy cost
(as shown on energy bills) to which
many consumers react. It is for this
reason that DOE provides all three
metrics—site energy, source energy, and
energy cost—in its determinations.
EEI’s second comment is in reference
to the fact that the Department does not
include the impact from new or updated
federal energy efficiency standards in its
determination of energy savings. For the
quantitative analysis performed for the
90.1–2010 preliminary determination
(https://www.energycodes.gov/status/
documents/
QuantitativeAnalysisReport9012010Determination.pdf), DOE
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incorporated only addenda that
modified the prescriptive requirements
of the Standard. New or updated federal
efficiency standards are not
independent requirements of the
standard, but rather reflections of
Federal manufacturing requirements. In
specific circumstances, particularly
with regard to requirements for certain
heating, ventilation, and air
conditioning (HVAC) equipment,
addenda to Standard 90.1–2010 reflect
changes to national manufacturing
standards previously developed by DOE
or enacted independently through
Federal legislation. The energy savings
that are attributable to these national
manufacturing standards would accrue
no matter what version of Standard 90.1
is considered and regardless of whether
they are reflected in the text of the
Standards, therefore DOE has not
incorporated these as changes
contributing to energy savings for the
purpose of the Determination.
EEI’s third comment requests that
information regarding the impact of
addendum ‘‘bu’’ be included in the final
determination. Addendum ‘‘bu’’ added
equipment efficiency requirements for
mechanical equipment serving
computer rooms, however none of the
prototype building models that DOE
uses in its simulations have data centers
and therefore the quantifiable impact of
this addendum was not captured. DOE
does note that the impact of addendum
‘‘bu’’ is captured in the qualitative, or
text comparison analysis, where
addendum ‘‘bu’’ is listed as a major
positive and noted as a new efficiency
requirement. When the prototype
building models used in this
determination were developed by DOE
and later reviewed by ASHRAE, no data
center models were included because at
that point Standard 90.1 did not include
efficiency requirements related to data
centers. DOE did not add data centers to
the prototype building models for this
determination because the quantitative
impact of this addendum would not
change the fact that this is a positive
final determination of energy savings.
DOE is considering adding data centers
to the prototype building models for
future determinations.
EEI’s final comment suggests that
DOE use a more realistic electricity ratio
for determining primary energy
associated with electricity production
by crediting renewable energy
production on the primary side of
generation and on the on-site/delivered
side of electricity consumption. The
Department has chosen to be consistent
within their energy analyses by using
Energy Information Administration’s
(EIA) data and conversion factors solely
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and by choosing not to mix and match
conversion factors. DOE recognizes that
these conversion factors are estimates
and that some types of utility energy
inputs do not have known conversion
factors and other inputs have multiple
generally accepted conversion factors.
The Department has chosen not to
subtract primary renewable energy from
the delivered electricity losses value
because renewable energy generated as
primary energy is still subject to losses
in the delivery process to the site. Also,
DOE has chosen not to add on-site
generated renewable energy to the
delivered electricity value when
determining the electricity ratio because
on-site generated renewable energy is
not subject to the losses that are
incurred when delivering primary
energy from the plant to the site.
Therefore the delivered electricity and
delivered electricity loss values used in
the preliminary determination are the
same values used in this final
determination and yield the electricity
ratio of 3.2, explained on page 31–32 of
this notice, for converting how much
primary (source) electricity is required
per unit of site required electricity.
The Gas Technology Institute (GTI)
submitted a written comment (Docket
No. EERE–2010–BT–DET–0050–0005,
pg. 1) stating that it supports the
analysis and states that until ASHRAE
90.1 addresses issues related to full fuelcycle energy metrics and a single
baseline building budget, the DOE
preliminary determination is
incomplete and misleading.
The Department’s preliminary
determination does estimate source
energy metrics, and DOE has not chosen
to use a single baseline building budget
because there are a multitude of
building types with far different
operating requirements and
accompanying energy needs. A single
baseline building budget would
penalize certain building types while
aiding other building types depending
on how far away their respective
baseline budgets were from a single
average baseline budget.
DOE also notes that while DOE has
recently issued a notice of proposed
policy (NOPP) related to full-fuel-cycle
analysis for appliance and equipment
standards (76 FR 51281, Docket No.
EERE–2010–BT–NOA–0028, ‘‘Energy
Conservation Program for Consumer
Products and Certain Commercial and
Industrial Equipment: Statement of
Policy for Adopting Full-Fuel-Cycle
Analyses Into Energy Conservation
Standards Program’’), this policy was
not proposed for application to building
energy codes and standards such as
Standard 90.1. This policy was a direct
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offshoot of the National Academy of
Sciences report discussed in
conjunction with the comment below
from Laclede Gas Company. DOE notes
that GTI’s comment takes issue with
standard 90.1. DOE’s role in
determinations is to compare the latest
version of Standard 90.1 with the
previous version and to determine if the
latest version improves the level of
energy efficiency in commercial
buildings over the previous version.
While DOE is a participant in the
Standard 90.1 development process,
DOE does not control the content of
Standard 90.1.
The American Gas Association
submitted a written comment (Docket
No. EERE–2010–BT–DET–0050–0004,
pg. 1) stating that the performance
requirements for commercial electric
storage water heaters greater then 12kW
appear to be less stringent than the
current federal minimum efficiency
requirements for this class of water
heaters.
DOE acknowledges the discrepancy
between Federal standards for
commercial electric storage water
heaters and the requirements for this
equipment in Standard 90.1–2010. For
the purposes of this determination the
performance requirements for
commercial electric storage water
heaters greater than 12kW in ASHRAE
90.1–2010 are not applicable as this
determination is only concerned with
whether the 90.1–2010 version
improves the level of energy efficiency
in commercial buildings compared to
the 2007 version of 90.1, and the
performance requirements of this
equipment did not change from the
2007 to 2010 version.
The Laclede Gas Company submitted
a written comment (Docket No. EERE–
2010–BT–DET–0050–0007, pgs. 1–5)
stating the following three issues: (1)
Laclede contends there is a conflict of
interest because DOE evaluates new
versions of the ASHRAE 90.1 through
its Pacific Northwest National Lab
(PNNL), the staff of which participate in
ASHRAE committees; (2) Laclede
objects ‘‘to the site-based energy
efficiency metric because it does not
fulfill the ‘scientific integrity’ objectives
as ordered by the Presidential Scientific
Integrity Memorandum of March 9,
2009’’; and (3) Laclede is concerned that
‘‘DOE has limited its ‘Statement of
Policy’ for implementing the National
Academy of Sciences (NAS) conclusions
to the minimum efficiency standards of
appliances. Laclede contends that the
NAS conclusions should also apply to
building efficiency standards.’’
In response to Laclede’s first issue,
DOE acknowledges that staff members at
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PNNL participate in ASHRAE. However,
the determination analyses were
reviewed by DOE management.
In response to Laclede’s second issue,
DOE believes that its determination on
Standard 90.1–2010 has indeed
followed the requirements of the
Presidential Memorandum on Scientific
Integrity. DOE has subjected the
scientific and technological information
it considered in this determination to
well-established scientific processes and
DOE made available to the public the
scientific and technological findings
and conclusions considered or relied on
in this final determination by way of the
preliminary determination and public
comment period. DOE provides all three
metrics—site energy, source energy, and
energy cost—in its determinations. DOE
does not mandate energy efficiency
standards which give electric resistance
heat an efficiency advantage over
natural gas. DOE’s role in
determinations is to compare the latest
version of Standard 90.1 with the
previous version and to determine if the
latest version improves the level of
energy efficiency in commercial
buildings over the previous version.
In response to Laclede’s third issue,
DOE interprets the phrase ‘‘NAS
conclusions’’ to refer to the National
Academy of Sciences (NAS) report
entitled ‘‘Review of Site (Point-of-Use)
and Full-Fuel-Cycle Measurement
Approaches to DOE/EERE Building
Appliance Energy-Efficiency
Standards—Letter Report (2009)
(available at https://books.nap.edu/
openbook.php?record_id=12670&
page=1). DOE has not limited its
‘‘Statement of Policy’’ because this NAS
report is for the application to ‘‘building
appliances’’ where DOE has statutory
authority to set building appliance
standards, and does not apply to
determinations of energy efficiency for
building energy codes. Today’s
determination is based on a review of
the work of ASHRAE, as required by
statute, and does not establish the
efficiency standards of the ASHRAE
code.
The Building Codes Assistance
Project (BCAP) submitted a written
comment (Docket No. EERE–2010–BT–
DET–0050–0003, pgs. 1–2) supporting
the DOE’s determination and suggests
that DOE follow up with the States after
publication of the Final Determination
as well as making public which States
comply with the statutory requirements
to submit certification letters within two
years of publication.
DOE does list the States that have
filed certifications and those that have
or have not adopted new codes on the
DOE Energy Efficiency and Renewable
Energy Web site at https://
www.energycodes.gov/states/. Once a
State has adopted a new commercial
code, DOE typically provides software,
training, and support for the new code
as long as the new code is based on the
national model codes (in this case,
ASHRAE Standard 90.1).
The Natural Resources Defense
Council (NRDC) submitted a written
comment (Docket No. EERE–2010–BT–
DET–0050–0006, pgs. 1–2) agreeing
with and supporting the Department’s
preliminary determination that
ASHRAE Standard 90.1–2010 saves
energy compared to ASHRAE 90.1–2007
and urges the Department to finalize
this determination.
II. Summary of the Comparative
Analysis
DOE carried out both a detailed
qualitative analysis and a broad
quantitative analysis of the differences
between the requirements and the
stringencies in the 2007 and the 2010
editions.
A. Qualitative Analysis
1. Discussion of Detailed Textual
Analysis
DOE performed a detailed analysis of
the differences between the textual
requirements and stringencies of the
2007 and 2010 editions in the scope of
the standard, the building envelope
requirements, the building lighting and
power requirements, and the building
mechanical equipment requirements.
The emphasis of DOE’s detailed
requirement and stringency analysis
was on looking at the specific changes
that ASHRAE made in going from
Standard 90.1–2007 to Standard 90.1–
2010. ASHRAE publishes changes to
their standards as addenda to the
preceding standard and then bundles all
the addenda together to form the next
edition. ASHRAE processed 109
64907
addenda to Standard 90.1–2007 to
create Standard 90.1–2010. Each of
these addenda was evaluated by DOE in
preparing this final determination. No
changes were made to the final detailed
textual analysis from the preliminary
detailed textual analysis.
In addition, each standard has
multiple ways to demonstrate
compliance, including a prescriptive set
of requirements by section of the
standard, various tradeoff approaches
within those same sections, and a whole
building performance method (Energy
Cost Budget or ECB). For each
addendum DOE identified whether it
applies to the prescriptive requirements,
or one of the tradeoff paths provided for
in the envelope, lighting, or mechanical
sections, or the ECB whole building
performance path. For each addendum
DOE identified the impact on the
stringency for that path to compliance.
Overall, DOE found that that the vast
majority of changes made to Standard
90.1–2007 to create Standard 90.1–2010
were positive or neutral (in the context
of energy efficiency). Positive changes
greatly outweighed the negative energy
efficiency changes. Specifically, of the
109 total changes:
56 were considered positive;
47 were considered neutral;
6 were considered negative.
The 56 positive changes greatly
overwhelm the 6 negative changes in
terms of a simple numerical
comparison. In addition, the 6 negative
changes were considered to be ‘‘minor
negatives’’, with 19 of the positive
changes being considered ‘‘major
positive’’ and an additional 37 positive
changes being considered ‘‘minor
positive’’. Not only do the positive
changes outweigh the negative changes
in raw numbers, but also in terms of the
estimated impact.
2. Results of Detailed Textual Analysis
Table 1 presents the results of DOE’s
addendum-by-addendum analysis of
Standard 90.1–2010. Table 6 is a
reformatted and slightly modified
version of a table in the preliminary
qualitative analysis. The complete
preliminary qualitative analysis may be
found on the DOE codes Web site at
https://www.energycodes.gov/status/
determinations_com.stm.
TABLE 1—RESULTS OF ADDENDUM-BY-ADDENDUM ANALYSIS
No.
Addendum
to
standard
90.1–2007
1 ...............
A ..............
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Description of changes
6. Heating, Ventilating, Remove closed cooling tower requirements
and Air Conditioning.
from 6.8.1G.
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Impact on energy efficiency and reason
0 (clarifies that requirements do not apply to
closed cooling towers).
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TABLE 1—RESULTS OF ADDENDUM-BY-ADDENDUM ANALYSIS—Continued
Addendum
to
standard
90.1–2007
2 ...............
B ..............
3 ...............
C ..............
4 ...............
D ..............
5 ...............
E ..............
6 ...............
7 ...............
F ...............
G ..............
8 ...............
H ..............
9 ...............
I ................
10 .............
J ...............
11 .............
K ..............
12 .............
L ...............
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14 .............
N ..............
15 .............
O ..............
16 .............
P ..............
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Section affected
Description of changes
6. Heating, Ventilating, Revises exception a to section 6.5.2.3 to
and Air Conditioning.
allow for codes other than ASHRAE 62.1
to dictate minimum ventilation rates.
6. Heating, Ventilating, Adds vivarium to list of spaces that require
and Air Conditioning.
specific humidity levels to satisfy process
needs.
3. Definitions, AbbreAdds exceptions for Solar Heat Gain Coeffiviations, and Acrocient (SHGC) and Visible Transmittance
nyms; 5. Building
(VT) requirements for skylights; adds reEnvelope; 9. Lightquirement for including visible light transing.
mittance test results with construction documents; adds information on determining
daylit area under skylights, automatic
daylighting controls (with exceptions), and
submittal requirements.
6. Heating, Ventilating, Changes exhaust air energy recovery reand Air Conditioning.
quirements and harmonizes requirements
in simplified section 6.3.2 with requirements in the 6.5 prescriptive path.
5. Building Envelope .. Requires high albedo roofs in hot climates ...
3. Definitions, AbbreUpdates building envelope criteria for metal
viations, and Acrobuildings.
nyms; 5. Building
Envelope.
6. Heating, Ventilating, Adds another exception to Section 6.5.2.1
and Air Conditioning.
Limitation of Simultaneous Heating and
Cooling. The exception addresses apparent conflict between standards and allows
users to achieve comfort, meet the code,
and save energy.
9. Lighting .................. Applies a four-zone lighting power density
approach to exterior lighting requirements.
Deletes the 5% additional power allowance in 9.4.5 and replaces it with a base
wattage allowance per site. Defines the
four zones and applies the appropriate requirements.
6. Heating, Ventilating, Updates the mechanical test procedures refand Air Condierences in the standard. The changes also
tioning; 12. Normodify a reference in Table 6.8.1E, the
mative References;
normative references in Chapter 12, and
Appendix E. Informthe informative references in Informative
ative References.
Appendix E.
6. Heating, Ventilating, Updates Tables 6.8.1E and 7.8 to identify
and Air Conditioning.
specific sections of referenced standards.
Table 7.8 also reflects the current federal
efficiency levels for residential water heaters and adds a requirement for electric
table-top water heaters.
6. Heating, Ventilating, Adds minimum efficiency and certification reand Air Conditioning.
quirements for axial and centrifugal fan
closed-circuit cooling towers. Also adds a
reference to ATC–105S, The Cooling
Technology Institute test standard for
closed-circuit cooling towers to Section 12.
6. Heating, Ventilating, Updates chiller efficiency requirements. Esand Air Conditioning.
tablishes additional path of compliance for
water-cooled chillers. Combines all watercooled chillers into one category and adds
a new size category for centrifugal chillers
at or above 600 tons.
6. Heating, Ventilating, Extends Variable Air Volume (VAV) fan conand Air Conditioning.
trol requirements to large single-zone units.
8. Power ..................... Modifies the scope of Section 8 and adds requirements specific to low voltage dry-type
distribution transformers.
6. Heating, Ventilating, Provides pressure credits for laboratory exand Air Conditioning.
haust systems that allow prescriptive compliance with the standard.
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Impact on energy efficiency and reason
Minor—(allows larger minimum ventilation
rates if required by other codes).
Minor—(allows exception to dehumidification
controls for vivariums).
Major + (requires daylighting controls under
skylights and commissioning of daylighting
controls).
Major + (increased use of heat recovery).
Major + (requires cool roofs in hot climates)
Minor + (increases envelope requirements
for metal buildings).
Minor + (allows another exception that saves
energy in some applications).
Major + (lowers illuminance requirements in
certain zones).
0 (updating references).
0 (updating tables to reflect current federal
standards).
0 (Requirement codifies industry standard
practice).
Major + (updates chiller efficiency requirements).
Major + (extends control requirements to another equipment class).
0 (implements Federal efficiency standards
for transformers).
Minor—(increases allowable pressure drop in
laboratory exhaust systems).
E:\FR\FM\19OCN1.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 202 / Wednesday, October 19, 2011 / Notices
64909
TABLE 1—RESULTS OF ADDENDUM-BY-ADDENDUM ANALYSIS—Continued
Addendum
to
standard
90.1–2007
Section affected
Description of changes
Impact on energy efficiency and reason
17 .............
Q ..............
5. Building Envelope ..
Vestibules, remove CZ4 exception ................
18 .............
R ..............
Informative Appendix
G. Performance
Rating Method.
Minor + (applies vestibule requirement in
more locations).
0 (performance rating method only).
19 .............
S ..............
20 .............
T ...............
21 .............
U ..............
22 .............
V ..............
23 .............
W .............
24 .............
X ..............
25 .............
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26 .............
Aa ............
27 .............
Ab ............
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Changes Informative Appendix G Performance Rating Method into a Normative Appendix. Additionally, some language has
been modified to make the Appendix Enforceable.
6. Heating, Ventilating, Updates the Coefficient of Performance
and Air Conditioning.
(COP) at 17 °F efficiency levels for commercial heat pumps and introduces a new
part-load energy efficiency descriptor
(IEER) for all commercial unitary products
above 65,000 Btu/h of cooling capacity.
6. Heating, Ventilating, Removes the term ‘‘replacement’’ and ‘‘new
and Air Conditioning.
construction’’ from the product classes listed in Table 6.8.1D and replaces them with
the terms ‘‘nonstandard size’’ and ‘‘standard size’’ to clarify that one product class
is intended for applications with nonstandard size exterior wall openings while
the other is intended for applications with
standard size exterior wall openings. Also
amends section 6.4.1.5.2 and footnote b to
Table 6.8.1D to clarify that nonstandard
size packaged terminal equipment have
sleeves with an external wall opening less
than 16 in. high or less than 42 in. wide to
reflect existing applications where the wall
opening is not necessarily less than 16 in.
high and less than 42 in. wide. However,
to avoid a potential abuse of the definition,
nonstandard size packaged terminal
equipment are required to have a crosssectional area of the sleeves less than 670
in2.
6. Heating, Ventilating, Adds a new section requiring centrifugal fan
and Air Conditioning.
open-circuit cooling towers over 1100 gpm
at the rating conditions to meet efficiency
requirements for axial fan units found in
6.8.1G.
6. Heating, Ventilating, Revises section 6.4.2.1 to reference ANSI/
and Air CondiASHRAE/ACCA Standard 183–2007 for
tioning; 12. Norsizing heating and cooling system design
mative References.
loads. Adds requirements for calculating
pump head.
Normative Appendix
Changes footnote to Table G3.1.1A to make
G. Performance
it clear that Exception a to Section G3.1.1
Rating Method.
also applies here. Changes the exception
to G3.1.2.10 on Exhaust Air Energy Recovery for multifamily buildings because
they are unlikely to have a centralized exhaust air system needed to effectively recover heat.
9. Lighting .................. Updates requirements for automatic lighting
shutoff, adds specific occupancy sensor
applications, and provides additional clarification.
7. Service Water
Establishes ARI 1160 as the test procedure
Heating.
for heat pump pool heaters and requires
that the minimum COP of 4 be met at the
low outdoor temperature of 50 °F.
9. Lighting .................. Adds space exceptions for automatic lighting
controls.
3. Definitions, AbbreAdds definitions and provides daylighting
viations, and Acrocontrol requirements for side-lighted
nyms; and 9. Lightspaces.
ing.
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0 (replaces Integrated Part Load Value
(IPLV) with Energy Efficiency Ratio(EER)
to capture part load performance).
0 (clarification of definitions).
Minor + (applies cooling tower requirements
more broadly).
0 (updates references).
0 (performance rating method).
Major + (adds occupancy sensor requirements for many specific applications).
Minor + (requires COP be met at lower temperature).
Minor + (limits automatic-on controls to specific space types).
Major + (adds daylighting control requirements for side-lighted spaces).
E:\FR\FM\19OCN1.SGM
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64910
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 202 / Wednesday, October 19, 2011 / Notices
TABLE 1—RESULTS OF ADDENDUM-BY-ADDENDUM ANALYSIS—Continued
Addendum
to
standard
90.1–2007
28 .............
Ac .............
29 .............
Ad ............
30 .............
Ae ............
31 .............
Af .............
32 .............
Ag ............
33 .............
Ai ..............
34 .............
Aj ..............
35 .............
Ak .............
36 .............
Al ..............
37 .............
Am ...........
38 .............
An ............
39 .............
Ao ............
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41 .............
Aq ............
42 .............
Ar .............
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Section affected
Description of changes
3. Definitions, AbbreAdds incentives to use advanced lighting
viations, and Acrocontrols.
nyms; 9. Lighting.
6. Heating, Ventilating, Includes certification requirements for liquidand Air Conditioning.
to-liquid heat exchangers to benefit both
manufacturers and consumers, allow product comparisons, and provide incentives to
manufacturers to improve efficiency in
order to gain market share.
6. Heating, Ventilating, Adds a requirement for insulating the surand Air Conditioning.
faces of radiant panels that do not face
conditioned spaces.
6. Heating, Ventilating, Provides requirement for designers, contracand Air Conditioning.
tors, and owners to properly size system
piping (hydronic systems) to balance ongoing energy costs and first costs.
5. Building Envelope .. Adds requirement for rigid board insulation
overlap.
Normative Appendix
Removes requirement for comparing proG. Performance
posed buildings utilizing chilled water with
Rating Method.
a baseline building with on-site chillers,
and instead requires a baseline that also
uses purchased chilled water. Details
modifications to be made to the baseline
HVAC systems when purchased chilled
water or heat are included.
10. Other Equipment
Updates the text and table of Chapter 10 to
comply with new federal law for motors
rated at 1.0 horsepower and greater. Adding this information will help designers,
end-use customers, and code officials with
motor specifications and verifications.
6. Heating, Ventilating, Adds a pump isolation requirement for sysand Air Conditioning.
tems with multiple chillers and boilers and
temperature reset requirement for equipment with a minimum Btu/h. Revises wording to have requirements of 6.5.4.1 apply
only to cooling systems. Changes threshold of variable speed systems to 7.5 HP.
Adds requirement for differential pressure
reset. Does not preclude also implementing chilled water supply temperature
setpoint reset. Includes requirements for
hydronic Heat Pump and Water-Cooled
Unitary Air Conditioners.
5. Building Envelope .. Adds skylight requirements in certain space
types (enclosed spaces) to promote
daylighting energy savings.
5. Building Envelope .. Revise air leakage criteria for fenestration
and doors.
5. Building Envelope .. Expands table of default U-values for singledigit rafter roofs.
6. Heating, Ventilating, Repairs know errata to Table 6.8.1E and reand Air Conditioning.
orders the notes to properly organize
them. Corrects the error of identifying EC,
which should be listed as Et under ‘‘Warm
Air Furnaces, Gas-Fired’’ and also eliminates incorrect and redundant footnotes.
6. Heating, Ventilating, Includes demand controlled ventilation in the
and Air Conditioning.
simplified approach.
Title, 1. Purpose, and
Modify Title Purpose & Scope of ASHRAE
2. Scope.
90.1.
9. Lighting .................. Corrects an oversight in previous versions
where expanded exterior lighting power
limits were put in place but the details of
how to calculate the installed power and
compare it to the limits was not included.
This language revision puts the needed
details in the standard.
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Impact on energy efficiency and reason
0 (alternate compliance path).
0 (documentation only).
Minor + (reduced heat loss in radiant panels).
Minor + (requires proper hydronic system
sizing).
Minor + (reduces potential for thermal bridging).
0 (alternative compliance path).
0 (implements Federal motor requirements).
Minor + (reduces pumping energy).
Major + (requires skylights and daylighting in
some building types.
Minor + (decreased air leakage).
0 (updates default tables).
0 (editorial only).
Major + (reduces ventilation energy.
0 (no impact now, but does allow future positive additions to Standard 90.1).
0 (editorial only).
E:\FR\FM\19OCN1.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 202 / Wednesday, October 19, 2011 / Notices
64911
TABLE 1—RESULTS OF ADDENDUM-BY-ADDENDUM ANALYSIS—Continued
Addendum
to
standard
90.1–2007
43 .............
As .............
44 .............
At .............
45 .............
Au ............
46 .............
Av .............
47 .............
Aw ............
48 .............
Ax .............
49 .............
Ay .............
50 .............
Az .............
51 .............
Ba ............
52 .............
Bc .............
53 .............
Bd ............
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VerDate Mar<15>2010
Section affected
Description of changes
6. Heating, Ventilating, Removes exception for VAV turndown reand Air Conditioning.
quirements for zones with special pressurization requirements. Reduces laboratory
threshold where VAV or heat recovery is
required.
6. Heating, Ventilating, Clears up inconsistencies and conflicts reand Air Conditioning.
garding damper requirements in Chapter 6.
6. Heating, Ventilating, Updates efficiency tradeoff table for elimiand Air Conditioning.
nating economizers.
9. Lighting .................. Changes Section 9.1.2 to require that in all
spaces where alterations take place, all requirements of Section 9 are met. Changes
exception so that the lighting power density (LPD) requirements of the standard
are met in the altered space if less than
10% of luminaries are replaced.
9. Lighting .................. Recognizes practical design application of
excluding bathroom lighting from ‘‘master’’
switch control in hotel/motel guest rooms
and adds a requirement to eliminate wasted light in guest room bathrooms. Adds a
5W allowance for night lights that recognizes the practical current design application of guest room bathroom night light
use but at a reasonable low level.
3. Definitions, AbbreExpands requirements for Kitchen Exhaust
viations, and AcroSystems (formerly Kitc8.4.1hen Hoods).
nyms; 6. Heating,
Includes addition of definitions for transfer
Ventilating, and Air
air, replacement air, and makeup air. Add
Conditioning.
Table 6.5.7.1.3 defining the maximum exhaust flow rate through various hood types
(CFM/Linear Foot of Hood Length). Include provisions for hoods with flows
greater than 5,000 CFM. Require performance testing to evaluate design airflow
rates and demonstrate capture and containment performance.
9. Lighting .................. Change that requires users to identify
spaces by function.
9. Lighting .................. Adds requirements for lighting controls to be
functionally tested to ensure proper use
and appropriate energy savings.
6. Heating, Ventilating, Allows a system performance option that aland Air Conditioning.
lows for compensating for the insulating
value of the piping while maintaining the
same net thermal requirements.
5. Building Envelope .. Clarifies that the requirements in Section
5.5.4.2.3
are
also
specified
for
unconditioned spaces.
8. Power ..................... Removes emergency circuits not used for
normal building operation from the requirements which will lead to increased compliance. Allows for an increased conformance/use of 90.1 standard by eliminating
issues of impracticality of feeder drop requirements for emergency circuits and provides significant initial cost savings.
3. Definitions, AbbreModifies language to include performance
viations, and Acrorequirements for air leakage of the opaque
nyms; 4. Adminisenvelope.
tration and Enforcement; 5. Building
Envelope.
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Impact on energy efficiency and reason
Minor + (saves large amount of fan and reheat energy in hospitals).
0 (editorial only).
0 (alternate compliance path).
Major + (expansion of new lighting power
densities to more retrofits).
Minor—(adds additional lighting allowance).
Minor + (more stringent kitchen exhaust requirements).
Minor + (requires users to use proper LPDs).
Minor + (requires testing of lighting systems).
0 (alternative compliance path).
0 (clarification only).
0 (removes emergency circuits from requirements, but only impact is when emergency
circuits are activated).
Minor + (reduces air leakage allowances in
opaque envelope).
E:\FR\FM\19OCN1.SGM
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64912
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 202 / Wednesday, October 19, 2011 / Notices
TABLE 1—RESULTS OF ADDENDUM-BY-ADDENDUM ANALYSIS—Continued
Addendum
to
standard
90.1–2007
55 .............
Bg ............
56 .............
Bh ............
57 .............
Bi ..............
58 .............
Bj ..............
59 .............
Bk .............
60 .............
Bl ..............
61 .............
Bm ...........
62 .............
Bn ............
63 .............
Bo ............
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Bq ............
66 .............
Br .............
67 .............
Bs .............
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Section affected
Description of changes
6. Heating, Ventilating,
and Air Conditioning; 12. Normative References.
Establishes a product class for water-towater heat pumps. Intent is to recognize
the technology in 90.1 by requiring minimum energy efficiency standards. Cooling
Energy Efficiency Ratios (EERs) and heating COPs are proposed for products with
cooling capacities below 135,000 Btu/h at
standard rating conditions listed in International Organization for Standardization
(ISO) standard 13256–2.
6. Heating, Ventilating, Provides requirements for multiple zone
and Air Conditioning.
HVAC systems (that include simultaneous
heating and cooling) to include controls
that automatically raise the supply air-temperature when the spaces served are not
at peak load conditions. Allows an override
of the temperature reset if a maximum
space humidity setpoint is exceeded.
There is an exception from this requirement for warm and humid climate zones
1a, 2a, and 3a.
6. Heating, Ventilating, Updates requirements for piping insulation,
and Air Conditioning.
including incorporation of new 90.1 SPPC
economic criteria used in developing
standard requirements. Adds footnotes to
address constrained locations and clarify
requirements for direct buried piping.
Normative Appendix
Adds an exception within Appendix G that alG. Performance
lows users to claim energy cost savings
Rating Method.
credit for the increased ventilation effectiveness of certain HVAC system designs.
3. Definitions, AbbreIncludes the minimum efficiency requireviations and Acroments for both Subtype I and Subtype II
nyms; and 10.
motors as well as clarifies what specific
Other Equipment.
motor types these requirements apply to.
6. Heating, Ventilating, Corrects the intent of the standard to not exand Air Conditioning.
empt all chillers with secondary coolants
for freeze protection from coverage by
Table 6.8.1C and removes ambiguity.
Changes footnote a to Table 6.8.1C in recognition of lower practical scope limits for
the lower limit introduced in Addendum M
for centrifugal chillers.
5. Building Envelope .. Coordinates terminology for visible transmittance with NFRC 200.
5. Building Envelope;
Limits use of poorly oriented fenestration—
11. Energy Cost
compliance shown by having more southBudget Method.
facing than west-facing fenestration. Provides exceptions for retail glass and buildings potentially shaded from the south or
west. Exception also provided for certain
additions and alterations.
Normative Appendix
Effort to keep requirements of Section 11
G. Performance
and Appendix G consistent with other adRating Method.
denda. Makes changes related to Addenda E, S, and U.
9. Lighting .................. Allows the use of control that provides automatic 50% auto on with the capability to
manually activate the remaining 50% and
has full auto-off.
9. Lighting .................. Retail lighting additional allowance levels reduced.
9. Lighting .................. Adds an exterior zone 0 to cover very low
light requirement areas.
8. Power ..................... Adds requirements to provide a means for
non-critical receptacle loads to be automatically controlled based on occupancy
or scheduling without additional individual
desktop or similar controllers.
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Impact on energy efficiency and reason
Minor + (adds requirement where no requirement previously existed).
Major + (requires supply air temperature
reset for non-peak conditions).
Minor + (reduced piping heat loss/gain).
0 (alternative compliance path).
0 (clarification only).
Minor + (removes exemption for some
chillers).
0 (terminology only).
Minor + (limits poor fenestration orientation).
0 (alternative compliance path).
Minor + (allows use of additional energy saving control strategy).
Minor + (lower retail lighting energy).
Minor + (reduced exterior lighting energy).
Minor + (reduces energy use during unoccupied periods).
E:\FR\FM\19OCN1.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 202 / Wednesday, October 19, 2011 / Notices
64913
TABLE 1—RESULTS OF ADDENDUM-BY-ADDENDUM ANALYSIS—Continued
Addendum
to
standard
90.1–2007
68 .............
Bt .............
69 .............
Bu ............
70 .............
Bv .............
71 .............
Bw ............
72 .............
Bx .............
73 .............
By .............
74 .............
Ca ............
75 .............
Cb ............
76 .............
Cc ............
77 .............
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78 .............
Ce ............
79 .............
Cf .............
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Section affected
Description of changes
6. Heating, Ventilating, Modifies equation for determining the perand Air Conditioning.
formance adjustment factor for chillers
under nonstandard conditions. Adds labeling requirements for chillers to make compliance determinations simpler.
3. Definitions, AbbreModifies and adds to requirements for comviations, and Acroputer rooms.
nyms; and 6. Heating, Ventilating, and
Air Conditioning.
Normative Appendix
Effort to keep requirements of Section 11
G. Performance
and Appendix G consistent with other adRating Method.
denda to 90.1. This addendum includes
changes to Section 11 and Appendix G
due to Addendum Y, AJ, BK, and AX.
6. Heating, Ventilating, Amends minimum energy efficiency requireand Air Conditioning.
ments for standard-size package terminal
equipment to be consistent with the new
federal standards.
6. Heating, Ventilating, Supplements changes made in addendums
and Air Conditioning.
H and AS. Attempts to bring into alignment
requirements of ASHRAE 90.1 and
ASHRAE 62.1. Limits the reheat supply air
temperature from ceiling supply air devices
to achieve better room air distribution and
reduce short-circuiting of air into ceiling return air inlets. Promotes alternative methods of heating perimeter spaces with high
heat losses other than use of a VAV box
with terminal reheat.
3. Definitions, AbbreRevision represents a complete review, upviations, and Acrodate, correction, and restructuring of the
nyms; 9. Lighting.
modeling and calculation basis for the
space type and resulting whole building
type lighting power densities.
6. Heating, Ventilating, Closes a loophole in the fan power allowand Air Conditioning.
ances for single zone variable air volume
(VAV) systems.
6. Heating, Ventilating, Adds requirement for simple systems to
and Air Conditioning.
meet prescriptive outdoor air damper requirements.
Allows backdraft dampers only for exhaust
and relief dampers in buildings less than 3
stories in height. Requires backdraft
dampers on outdoor air intakes to be protected from wind limiting windblown infiltration through the damper.
Moves climate zone 5a to the category of climates that require low leak dampers. Corrects a mistake in Table 6.4.3.4.4 Reformats Table 6.4.3.4.4 for clarity.
6. Heating, Ventilating, Corrects a mistake in the way 8″ pipe was
and Air Conditioning.
analyzed.
9. Lighting .................. Additions to (1) Strengthen language to actually require exterior control rather than just
require the control capability, (2) add bilevel control for general all-night applications such as parking lots to reduce lighting when not needed, and (3) add control
for facade and landscape lighting not
¸
needed after midnight.
9. Lighting .................. Adds requirements for multilevel control capability (bi-level switching) in all spaces
except those specifically exempted.
9. Lighting .................. Adds requirements for automatic reduction of
stairway lighting within 30 minutes of occupants exiting the zone.
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Impact on energy efficiency and reason
Minor + (chillers that were previously exempt
are no longer exempt).
Major + (adds efficiency requirements for
data centers).
0 (alternative compliance paths).
0 (implements existing Federal standards).
Minor + (limits reheat supply air temperatures).
Major + (lowered lighting power densities).
Minor + (removes fan power allowance for
VAV systems without terminal units).
Major + (expansion of automatic damper requirements).
Minor—(increases allowable flow rate in 8″
pipe).
Major + (requires control of exterior lighting—savings during night when lights not
needed).
0 (manual control requirement).
Minor + (energy savings through use of controls in stairways).
E:\FR\FM\19OCN1.SGM
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64914
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 202 / Wednesday, October 19, 2011 / Notices
TABLE 1—RESULTS OF ADDENDUM-BY-ADDENDUM ANALYSIS—Continued
Addendum
to
standard
90.1–2007
80 .............
Ch ............
81 .............
Ck ............
82 .............
Cl .............
83 .............
Cn ............
84 .............
Co ............
85 .............
Cp ............
86 .............
Cq ............
87 .............
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No.
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88 .............
Cs ............
89 .............
Ct .............
90 .............
Cv ............
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Section affected
Description of changes
11. Energy Cost
Budget Method;
Normative Appendix
G. Performance
Rating Method.
Clarifies baseline minimum setpoints for fanpowered boxes and VAV reheat boxes.
Modifies exceptions to: remove exception
originally intended for hospitals and laboratory type spaces, clarify that lab systems with greater than 5000 cfm of exhaust air use a single VAV baseline system; and add exception to the 50% lab
VAV minimum airflow to address minimum
ventilation requirements lab designers follow to meet codes and accreditation
standards.
6. Heating, Ventilating, Expands zone-level demand controlled venand Air Conditioning.
tilation to include various forms of system
level strategies. It is being added to the
prescriptive section, so that it could be
traded off using the Energy Cost Budget
(ECB) method.
3. Definitions, AbbreClarifies how to interpret the use of dynamic
viations, and Acroglazing which are designed to be able to
nyms; 5. Building
vary a performance property such as Solar
Envelope.
Heat Gain Coefficient (SHGC), rather than
having just a single value.
9. Lighting .................. Adds two versions of a combined advanced
control to the control incentives table
(9.6.2). These control system combinations involve personal workstation control
and work-station-specific occupancy sensors for open office applications.
6. Heating, Ventilating, This proposal makes three amendments to
and Air Conditioning.
Table 6.8.1A. First, it updates EER and
IEER values for all condensing units and
water and evaporatively cooled air conditioners with cooling capacities greater than
65,000 Btu/h. Second, the proposal establishes a separate product class for evaporatively cooled air conditioners with different energy efficiency standards. Third,
the proposal replaces the IPLV descriptor
for condensing units with the new IEER
metric and amends the EERs with more
stringent values.
3. Definitions, AbbreEstablishes efficiency requirements for Variviations, and Acroable Refrigerant Flow (VRF) air condinyms; 6. Heating,
tioners and heat pumps including heat
Ventilating, and Air
pumps that use a water source for heat reConditioning.
jection.
6. Heating, Ventilating, Addendum is based on economic analysis
and Air Condiusing the current scalar value. Nearly all
tioning; Informative
classes are economically justified at seal
Appendix E. Informclass A, allowing for the removal of two taative References.
bles.
3. Definitions, AbbreModifies definition of unmet load hour and
viations, and Acroadds definition for temperature control
nyms; 11. Energy
throttling range. Requires that both baseCost Budget Methline and proposed unmet hours not exceed
od and Normative
300. Removes language allowing modificaAppendix G. Pertion of system coil capacities to reduce
formance Rating
unmet hours as needed.
Method.
8. Power ..................... Modifies automatic receptacle control requirements and exemptions to eliminate
potential practical application issues.
9. Lighting .................. Reduces the area threshold where side
daylighting requires daylight sensor control
down to 250 square feet.
10. Other Equipment
Adds requirements for service water pressure booster systems.
16:34 Oct 18, 2011
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Impact on energy efficiency and reason
0 (alternative compliance path).
Minor + (expands automatic zone reset in
multizone systems).
0 (alternative compliance path).
0 (alternative compliance path).
Minor + (improves efficiency of minor market
products).
0 (not more stringent than common practice).
Minor + (reduced duct leakage).
0 (alternative compliance paths).
Major+ (minimizes exceptions to switched receptacle requirement.
Minor + (reduce area requirement for occupancy sensors).
Minor + (adds requirement s for service
water pressure booster systems).
E:\FR\FM\19OCN1.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 202 / Wednesday, October 19, 2011 / Notices
64915
TABLE 1—RESULTS OF ADDENDUM-BY-ADDENDUM ANALYSIS—Continued
Addendum
to
standard
90.1–2007
91 .............
Cw ............
92 .............
Cy ............
93 .............
Cz ............
94 .............
da .............
95 .............
db .............
96 .............
dc .............
97 .............
dd .............
5. Building Envelope;
and 9. Lighting.
98 .............
de .............
9. Lighting ..................
99 .............
df ..............
10. Other Equipment
100 ...........
dg .............
101 ...........
di ..............
102 ...........
emcdonald on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
No.
dj ..............
103 ...........
dk .............
3. Definitions, Acronyms, and Abbreviations; and Normative Appendix G.
Performance Rating
Method.
3. Definitions, AbbreAdds requirements for enclosed parking gaviations, and Acrorage ventilation.
nyms; 6. Heating,
Ventilating, and Air
Conditioning.
6. Heating, Ventilating, Limits the fan energy allowance for energy
and Air Conditioning.
recovery devices to values that approximate the results of the economic analysis,
with some allowance to permit adequate
pressure drop for products near the minimum recovery effectiveness of 50%. A
separate allowance is also created for coil
runaround loop systems.
Normative Appendix
Adds clarity and instruction to the users of
C. Methodology for
Appendix C, the envelope trade off option,
Building Envelope
for new requirements that were added in
Trade-Off Option in
addendums AL, BC, and BN. AL required
Subsection 5.6.
skylights and lighting controls in certain
occupancies. BC required skylights and
lighting controls in unconditioned semiheated spaces. BN dealt with orientation
specific SHGC requirements..
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Section affected
Description of changes
11. Energy Cost
Budget Method.
Revises the Energy Cost Budget for service
hot water heaters. Corrects contradiction
with section 11.32(b). Provides user instruction for situations where a certain
type of service hot water system is not listed in Table 7.8.
6. Heating, Ventilating, Makes several revisions to the economizer
and Air Conditioning.
requirements in section 6.5.1 and 6.3.2.
Updates Table 6.3.2 which allows for the
elimination of economizers through the
use of higher efficiency HVAC equipment.
9. Lighting .................. Incorporates bi-level control for parking garages to reduce energy waste during unoccupied periods.
Normative Appendix
Establishes that an Appendix G baseline
G. Performance
shall be based on the minimum ventilation
Rating Method.
requirements required by local codes or a
rating authority and not the proposed design ventilation rates.
Normative Appendix
This addendum modifies the design air flow
G. Performance
rates for laboratory systems in the baseRating Method.
line building in Appendix G.
9. Lighting .................. Removes information related to tandem wiring of lighting.
16:34 Oct 18, 2011
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Reduces the area threshold where skylights
are required to be designed into building
spaces down to 5000 square feet and
similarly reduces the threshold where
daylighting controls must be applied to 900
square feet.
Splits the ‘‘generic lobby’’ from common elevator lobbies and lighting power densities
were adjusted to reflect specific space
needs. Also removes the fitness center audience seating because it’s considered a
space type that was considered not used
and potentially confusing..
Adds requirements that address excess energy use in elevators due to ventilation
fans and cab lighting.
Adds a definition for the term ‘‘field-fabricated fenestration’’ used in section
5.4.3.2 consistent with Interpretation IC
90.1–2007–01 and similar language in
California’s Title 24.
Frm 00024
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Impact on energy efficiency and reason
0 (alternative compliance path).
Major + (expands use of economizers).
Minor + (reduced parking garage lighting).
0 (performance rating method).
0 (performance rating method).
Minor—(tandem wiring no longer used in
practice—possible small increase in energy usage).
Major + (requires daylighting controls in
more spaces).
0 (allows more lighting power in lobbies but
less in elevator lobbies).
Minor + (small lighting and ventilation savings).
0 (clarification of definition).
Minor + (reduced parking garage ventilation
energy).
Minor + (limits fan energy allowance of energy recovery devices).
0 (alternative compliance path).
E:\FR\FM\19OCN1.SGM
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64916
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 202 / Wednesday, October 19, 2011 / Notices
TABLE 1—RESULTS OF ADDENDUM-BY-ADDENDUM ANALYSIS—Continued
No.
Addendum
to
standard
90.1–2007
104 ...........
dl ..............
105 ...........
dn .............
106 ...........
do .............
107 ...........
dp .............
12. Normative References.
108 ...........
dq .............
109 ...........
dr ..............
Normative Appendix
C. Methodology for
Building Envelope
Trade-Off Option in
Subsection 5.6.
9. Lighting ..................
Section affected
Description of changes
Normative Appendix
C. Methodology for
Building Envelope
Trade-Off Option in
Subsection 5.6.
Normative Appendix
G. Performance
Rating Method.
4. Administration and
Enforcement; 9.
Lighting.
Gives instruction to the users of Appendix C
on how to model the base envelope design and the proposed envelope design on
how to comply with the cool roof provisions of Section 5.
This addendum adds system types 9 and 10
for heated only storage spaces and associated changes.
Establishes the goals and requirements of
the lighting system including controls and
ensures that owners are provided all the
information necessary to best use and
maintain lighting systems.
Updates the references in 90.1 to reflect the
current edition of the cited standard. Substantive changes in the referenced documents did not affect the requirements in
90.1 or change the stringency of the requirements of 90.1.
Modifies the calculations found in Appendix
C in order to reflect modifications to the
modeling assumptions.
Table 2 is an overall summary of the
addenda in terms of their impact in the
qualitative analysis. Overall, the sum of
Impact on energy efficiency and reason
0 (alternative compliance path).
0 (performance rating method).
0 (documentation only).
0 (updates references).
0 (alternative compliance path).
Original purpose of 9.4.4 was to limit the use 0 (editorial only).
of inefficient lighting sources for high wattage applications when there was not a
comprehensive table of lighting power
density limits. With such a table now in
place, section 9.4.4 is no longer necessary.
the major positive and minor positive
addenda (56) greatly overwhelms the
number of minor negative addenda (6),
leading to the conclusion that the
overall impact of the addenda on the
standard is positive.
TABLE 2—OVERALL SUMMARY OF ADDENDA IMPACT IN QUALITATIVE ANALYSIS
Minor negative
Neutral
Minor positive
Major positive
Total
None
emcdonald on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Major negative
6
47
37
19
109
The 6 negative impacts on energy
efficiency include:
1. Addendum b—allows larger than
minimum ventilation rates if required
by other codes.
2. Addendum c—allows an exception
to dehumidification for controls for
vivariums.
3. Addendum p—increases allowable
pressure drop in laboratory exhaust
systems.
4. Addendum aw—adds an additional
lighting allowance for nightlights in
hotel/motel bathrooms.
5. Addendum cc—allows higher flow
rates in 8’’ piping.
6. Addendum dc—eliminates tandem
wiring requirement.
None of these negative impacts are
judged to be significant. Addendum b
simply acknowledges that Standard 90.1
does not address ventilation rates that
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16:34 Oct 18, 2011
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are required in other codes. Addendum
c simply adds vivariums (spaces used
for plant or animal growth) to the list of
spaces that may have more stringent
humidity requirements than normal
spaces. Addendum p increases
allowable pressure drop in laboratory
exhaust systems and addresses some
noted shortcomings in the previous
version of Standard 90.1 with regard to
fume hoods. Addendum aw
acknowledges the common practice of
the use of bathroom lights as
‘‘nightlights’’ in hotel/motel guest
rooms. Addendum cc corrects a
calculation error in the previous version
of Standard 90.1. Addendum dc
eliminates a tandem wiring requirement
for ballasts that is no longer used with
the widespread use of electronic
ballasts.
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The 19 major positive impacts on
energy efficiency include:
1. Addendum d—requires daylighting
controls under skylights and
commissioning of daylighting controls.
2. Addendum e—requires increased
use of heat recovery.
3. Addendum f—requires cool roofs in
hot climates.
4. Addendum i—lower illuminance
requirements in certain exterior zones.
5. Addendum m—updates chiller
efficiency requirements.
6. Addendum n—extends VAV fan
control requirements.
7. Addendum x—adds occupancy
sensor requirements for many specific
applications.
8. Addendum ab—adds daylighting
control requirements for side-lighted
spaces.
E:\FR\FM\19OCN1.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 202 / Wednesday, October 19, 2011 / Notices
9. Addendum al—requires skylights
and daylighting in some building types.
10. Addendum ap—reduces
ventilation energy.
11. Addendum av—expansion of new
lighting power densities to more
retrofits.
12. Addendum bh—requires supply
air temperature reset for non-peak
conditions.
13. Addendum bu—adds efficiency
requirements for data centers.
14. Addendum by—required lower
lighting power densities.
15. Addendum cb—expands
automatic damper requirements.
16. Addendum cd—requires control
of exterior lighting.
17. Addendum cs—minimizes
exceptions to switched receptacle
requirement.
18. Addendum cy—expands use of
economizers.
19. Addendum dd—requires
daylighting controls in more spaces.
Many of these ‘‘major positive’’
addenda are self descriptive. The highlevel themes of the major positive
addenda tend to be as follows:
• Better lighting, daylighting, and
controls (d, i, x, ab, al, av, by, cd, cs, and
dd)
• Better mechanical systems and
application to more systems (e, m, n, ap,
bh, bu, cb, and cy).
• Better building envelope (f).
There are an additional 37 addenda
that have minor positive impacts. See
the complete qualitative analysis for
additional detail.
emcdonald on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
B. Quantitative Analysis
1. Discussion of Whole Building Energy
Analysis
The quantitative comparison of
Standard 90.1–2010 was carried out
using whole-building energy
simulations of buildings built to both
Standard 90.1–2007 and Standard 90.1–
2010. DOE simulated 16 representative
building types in 15 U.S. climate
locations, each climate location selected
to be representative of one of the 15 U.S.
climate zones used in the definition of
building energy code criteria in
Standard 90.1–2007 and Standard 90.1–
2010. The simulations were developed
using specific building prototypes based
on the DOE commercial reference
building models developed for DOE’s
Net-Zero Energy Commercial Building
Initiative. (These reference building
prototypes were formerly known as
Benchmark building models). No
changes were made to the final
quantitative analysis from the
preliminary quantitative analysis.
For each building prototype simulated
in each climate the energy use
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16:34 Oct 18, 2011
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intensities (EUI) by fuel type and by
end-use were extracted. These EUIs by
fuel type for each building were then
weighted to national average EUI figures
using weighting factors based on the
relative square footage of construction
represented by that prototype in each of
the 15 climate regions. These weighting
factors were based on commercial
building construction starts data for a
five year period from 2003 to 2007. The
source of data was the McGraw-Hill
Construction Projects Starts Database
(MHC). The MHC database captures
over 90% of new commercial
construction in any given year and the
collection process is independently
monitored to ensure the coverage of
most of the commercial construction in
the U.S. The data is used by other
federal agencies such as the U.S. Census
Bureau, the Federal Reserve and the
U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services (HHS) for characterizing
building construction in the U.S. For the
purpose of developing construction
weighting factors, the strength of this
data lies in the number of samples, the
characterization of each sample in terms
of building end-use and size and
number of stories, the frequency of data
collection, and the detailed location
data. In addition, the MHC database can
be used to identify multifamily
residential buildings that would be
covered under ASHRAE Standard 90.1.
DOE’s prototypes reflect the use of
two fuel types, electricity and natural
gas. Using the weighting factors, DOE
was able to establish an estimate of the
relative reduction in building energy
use, as determined by a calculated
reduction in weighted average site EUI
for each building prototype. Site energy
refers to the energy consumed at the
building site. In a corresponding
fashion, DOE was also able to calculate
a reduction in terms of weighted average
primary EUI and in terms of weighted
average energy cost intensity (ECI) in
$/sq. ft. of building floorspace. Primary
energy as used here refers to the energy
required to generate and deliver energy
to the site. To estimate primary energy,
all electrical energy use intensities were
first converted to primary energy using
a factor of 10,918 Btus primary energy
per kWh (based on the 2010 estimated
values reported in Table 2 of the EIA
2010 Annual Energy Outlook, release
date December 2009, available at https://
www.eia.doe.gov/oiaf/archive/aeo10/
aeoref_tab.html).
The conversion factor of 10,918 was
calculated from Table 2 by summing the
commercial electricity value of 4.62
quads with the electricity losses value of
10.17 quads and then dividing that sum
by the commercial value. ((4.62 +
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64917
10.17)/4.62 = 3.2) This yields an
electricity ratio of 3.2 for converting
how much primary (source) electricity
is required per unit of site required
electricity. This ratio of 3.2 is then
multiplied by 3,412 Btu per kWh,
producing a value of 10,918 Btus
primary energy per kWh of site energy.
Natural Gas EUIs in the prototypes were
converted to primary energy using a
factor of 1.090 Btus primary energy per
Btu of site natural gas use (based on the
2010 national energy use estimated
shown in Table 2 of the AEO 2010).
This natural gas source energy
conversion factor was calculated by
dividing the natural gas subtotal of
23.15 quads (sum of all natural gas
usage, including usage for natural gas
field production, leases, plant fuel, and
pipeline (compression) supply) by the
delivered natural gas total of 21.23
quads (sum of four primary energy
sectors (residential, commercial,
industrial, and transportation).
a. Calculation of Energy Cost Index
To estimate the reduction in energy
cost index, DOE relied on national
average commercial building energy
prices of $0.1026/kWh of electricity and
$10.06 per 1000 cubic feet ($0.9796/
therm) of natural gas, based on EIA
statistics for 2009 (the last complete
year of data available in Table 5B
Commercial Average Monthly Bill by
Census Division, and State—available
from EIA at https://www.eia.gov/cneaf/
electricity/esr/table5_b.html and for
2009 (the last complete year of data
available from the EIA Natural Gas
Annual Summary for the commercial
sector available at https://
tonto.eia.doe.gov/dnav/ng/ng_pri_sum_
dcu_nus_a.htm.) DOE recognizes that
actual fuel costs will vary somewhat by
building type within a region, and will
in fact vary more across regions.
Nevertheless, DOE believes that the use
of simple national average figures
illustrates whether there will be energy
cost savings sufficient for the purposes
of the DOE determination.
b. Calculation of Energy Use Intensities
Energy use intensities developed for
each representative building type were
weighted by total national square
footage of each representative building
type to provide an estimate of the
difference between the national energy
use in buildings constructed to the 2007
and 2010 editions of the Standard 90.1.
Note that the 16 buildings types used in
the final determination reflect
approximately 80% of the total square
footage of commercial construction
including multi-family buildings greater
E:\FR\FM\19OCN1.SGM
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64918
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 202 / Wednesday, October 19, 2011 / Notices
than three stories covered under
ASHRAE Standard 90.1.
Note that only differences between
new building requirements were
considered in this quantitative analysis.
Changes to requirements in the 2010
edition that pertain to existing buildings
only are addressed in the detailed
textual analysis only.
c. Application to Additions and
Renovations
Both the 2010 and 2007 editions
address additions and renovations to
existing buildings. Since DOE has
preliminarily found insufficient data to
characterize renovations in terms of
what energy using features are utilized,
DOE has not determined that the results
obtained from the whole building
prototypes used would reasonably
reflect the EUI benefits that would
accrue to renovated floor space. For this
reason, renovated floor space is not
included in the DOE weighting factors.
Building additions on the other hand
are believed to be substantially
equivalent to new construction. For this
reason, FW Dodge construction data on
additions has been incorporated into the
overall weighting factors. Floor space
additions reflect approximately 13
percent of new construction floor space
based on data captured in the FW Dodge
dataset.
d. Ventilation Rate Assumptions
The final quantitative analysis
assumed the same base ventilation level
for buildings constructed to Standard
90.1–2007 and Standard 90.1–2010.
Neither edition of Standard 90.1
specifies ventilation rates for
commercial building construction.
ASHRAE has a separate ventilation
standard for commercial construction,
ASHRAE Standard 62.1 Ventilation for
Acceptable Indoor Air Quality. This
standard is cited only in a few
exceptions within the mechanical
sections of either Standard 90.1–2007 or
Standard 90.1–2010, with each edition
referencing a different version of
Standard 62.1. Standard 90.1–2007 lists
Standard 62.1–2004 in its table of
references. Standard 90.1–2010 lists
Standard 62.1–2007 in its table of
references.
Ventilation rates can have significant
impact on the energy use of commercial
buildings. States and local jurisdictions
typically specify the ventilation
requirements for buildings within their
respective building codes and can set
these requirements independent of the
energy code requirements. Because of
the limited reference to ventilation
within either the 2007 or the 2010
edition, the requirements that States
certify that their energy codes meet or
exceed the 2010 edition of Standard
90.1 would in general not require
modification of State ventilation code
requirements. However, in many cases,
ventilation requirements can be traced
back to requirements found in one or
another version of Standard 62.1. For
the purpose of the quantitative analysis,
DOE assumed ventilation rates for the
simulation prototypes based on the
requirements of Standard 62.1–2004.
2. Results of Whole Building Energy
Analysis
The final quantitative analysis of the
energy consumption of buildings built
to Standard 90.1–2010, as compared
with buildings built to Standard 90.1–
2007, indicates national primary energy
savings of approximately 18.2 percent of
commercial building energy
consumption based on the weighting
factors for the 16 buildings simulated.
Site energy savings are estimated to be
approximately 18.5 percent. Using
national average fuel prices for
electricity and natural gas DOE
estimated a reduction in energy
expenditures of 18.2 percent would
result from the use of Standard 90.1–
2010 as compared to Standard 90.1–
2007. As identified previously, these
estimated savings figures do not include
energy savings from equipment or
appliance standards that would be in
place due to Federal requirements
regardless of their presence in the
Standard 90.1–2010.
Tables 3 and 4 show the aggregated
energy use and associated energy
savings by building type for the 16
building prototypes analyzed and on an
aggregated national basis for the 2007
and 2010 editions, respectively. For
each edition of Standard 90.1, the
national building floor area weight used
to calculate the national impact on
building EUI or building ECI is
presented. National-average site energy
use intensities ranges from over five
hundred Btu per square foot annually
for the Fast Food prototype to
approximately 20 Btu per square foot
annually for the Non-refrigerated
Warehouse type. Source energy use
intensities and building energy cost
intensities ($/sf-yr) are also presented.
Further details on the final quantitative
analysis can be found in the full final
quantitative analysis report available at
https://www.energycodes.gov/status/
determinations_com.stm.
TABLE 3—ESTIMATED ENERGY USE INTENSITY BY BUILDING TYPE—2007 EDITION
Building type
floor area
weight
%
Building type
Building prototype
Office ................................................
Small Office .....................................
Medium Office .................................
Large Office .....................................
Stand-Alone Retail ..........................
Strip Mall .........................................
Primary School ................................
Secondary School ...........................
Outpatient Health Care ...................
Hospital ............................................
Small Hotel ......................................
Large Hotel ......................................
Non-Refrigerated Warehouse .........
Fast-Food Restaurant .....................
Sit-Down Restaurant .......................
Mid-Rise Apartment .........................
High-Rise Apartment .......................
..........................................................
Retail ................................................
Education .........................................
emcdonald on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Healthcare ........................................
Lodging ............................................
Warehouse .......................................
Food Service ....................................
Apartment .........................................
National ............................................
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Whole building EUI data for building population
Site EUI
kBtu/ft2-yr
5.61
6.05
3.33
15.25
5.67
4.99
10.36
4.37
3.45
1.72
4.95
16.72
0.59
0.66
7.32
8.97
100
E:\FR\FM\19OCN1.SGM
39.1
47.7
42.8
65.0
68.3
63.4
54.2
162.0
156.4
70.8
157.1
24.2
547.7
382.4
44.2
44.2
67.5
19OCN1
Source EUI
kBtu/ft2-yr
118.4
140.6
123.3
179.5
186.0
170.2
149.7
438.0
374.9
179.4
315.8
58.6
1068.0
810.7
123.7
129.3
174.0
ECI
$/ft2-yr
$1.11
1.32
1.16
1.69
1.75
1.60
1.41
4.11
3.51
1.68
2.95
0.55
9.98
7.59
1.16
1.22
1.63
64919
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 202 / Wednesday, October 19, 2011 / Notices
TABLE 4—ESTIMATED ENERGY USE INTENSITY BY BUILDING TYPE—2010 EDITION
Building type
floor area
weight
%
Building type
Building prototype
Office ................................................
Small Office .....................................
Medium Office .................................
Large Office .....................................
Stand-Alone Retail ..........................
Strip Mall .........................................
Primary School ................................
Secondary School ...........................
Outpatient Health Care ...................
Hospital ............................................
Small Hotel ......................................
Large Hotel ......................................
Non-Refrigerated Warehouse .........
Fast-Food Restaurant .....................
Sit-Down Restaurant .......................
Mid-Rise Apartment .........................
High-Rise Apartment .......................
..........................................................
Retail ................................................
Education .........................................
Healthcare ........................................
Lodging ............................................
Warehouse .......................................
Food Service ....................................
Apartment .........................................
National ............................................
Table 5 presents the estimated percent
energy savings (based on change in EUI)
between the 2007 and 2010 editions.
Whole building EUI data for building population
Site EUI
kBtu/ft2-yr
5.61
6.05
3.33
15.25
5.67
4.99
10.36
4.37
3.45
1.72
4.95
16.72
0.59
0.66
7.32
8.97
100
Overall, considering those differences
that can be reasonably quantified, the
2010 edition is expected to increase the
32.8
37.1
33.3
48.0
56.9
48.0
39.8
125.4
118.1
66.6
139.8
19.2
519.9
330.9
41.2
41.0
55.0
Source EUI
kBtu/ft2-yr
ECI
$/ft2-yr
99.0
106.3
96.8
135.1
150.9
134.8
114.9
340.9
299.5
165.7
282.5
45.0
976.5
654.1
118.3
123.5
142.4
$0.93
1.00
0.91
1.27
1.42
1.27
1.08
3.20
2.81
1.55
2.64
0.42
9.12
6.12
1.11
1.16
1.34
energy efficiency of commercial
buildings. Numbers in Table 5 represent
percent energy savings.
TABLE 5—ESTIMATED PERCENT ENERGY SAVINGS WITH 2010 EDITION—BY BUILDING TYPE
Building type
Office ................................................
Retail ................................................
Education .........................................
Healthcare ........................................
Lodging ............................................
Warehouse .......................................
Food Service ....................................
Apartment .........................................
National ............................................
Small Office .....................................
Medium Office .................................
Large Office .....................................
Stand-Alone Retail ..........................
Strip Mall .........................................
Primary School ................................
Secondary School ...........................
Outpatient Health Care ...................
Hospital ............................................
Small Hotel ......................................
Large Hotel ......................................
Non-Refrigerated Warehouse .........
Fast Food Restaurant .....................
Sit-Down Restaurant .......................
Mid-Rise Apartment .........................
High-Rise Apartment .......................
..........................................................
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C. Final Determination Statement
DOE’s review and evaluation
indicates that there are significant
differences between the 2007 edition
and the 2010 edition. DOE’s overall
final conclusion is that the 2010 edition
will improve the energy efficiency of
commercial buildings.
However, DOE identified six changes
in textual requirements that taken alone
appear to represent a reduction in
stringencies and could decrease energy
efficiency. The six changes are:
• Addendum b, which allows larger
than minimum ventilation rates if
required by other codes;
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Building type
floor area
weight
%
Building prototype
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Site EUI
5.61
6.05
3.33
15.25
5.67
4.99
10.36
4.37
3.45
1.72
4.95
16.72
0.59
0.66
7.32
8.97
100
• Addendum c, which allows an
exception to dehumidification for
controls for vivariums;
• Addendum p, which increases
allowable pressure drop in laboratory
exhaust systems;
• Addendum aw, which adds an
additional lighting allowance for
nightlights in hotel/motel bathrooms;
• Addendum cc, which allows higher
flow rates in 8″ piping; and
• Addendum dc, which eliminates
tandem wiring requirements.
DOE believes that in these cases, the
reduction in stringency was not
considered a major impact. For the other
addenda, DOE determined that the
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Percent savings in whole building energy use
intensity (%)
16.1
22.1
22.3
26.1
16.8
24.2
26.7
22.6
24.5
5.9
11.0
20.7
5.1
13.5
6.8
7.2
18.5
Source EUI
16.4
24.4
21.5
24.7
18.9
20.8
23.3
22.2
20.1
7.7
10.5
23.1
8.6
19.3
4.4
4.5
18.2
ECI
16.4
24.4
21.5
24.7
18.9
20.8
23.2
22.2
20.1
7.7
10.5
23.1
8.6
19.4
4.4
4.5
18.2
remaining addenda either represented
no change in stringency, or indicated a
positive change in stringency
corresponding to improved efficiency.
Overall, DOE concluded the changes in
textual requirements and stringencies
are ‘‘positive,’’ in the sense that they
would improve energy efficiency in
commercial construction.
The quantitative analysis shows that
for the 16 prototype buildings, a
weighted average national improvement
in new building efficiency of 16.5
percent, when considering source
energy, and by 17.1 percent, when
considering site energy.
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As both the 2007 and 2010 editions
cover existing buildings, to the extent
that these standards are applied to
existing buildings in retrofits or in new
construction addition, the 2010 edition
should improve the efficiency of the
existing building stock.
DOE has, therefore, concluded that
Standard 90.1–2010 receive an
affirmative determination under Section
304(b) of ECPA.
III. Filing Certification Statements With
DOE
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A. Review and Update
Upon publication of this affirmative
final determination, each State is
required to review and update, as
necessary, the provisions of its
commercial building energy code to
meet or exceed the energy efficiency
provisions of the 2010 edition. (42
U.S.C. 6833(b)(2)(B)(i)) This action is
required to be taken not later than two
years from the date of publication of this
notice of final determination, unless an
extension is provided.
The DOE recognizes that some States
do not have a State commercial building
energy code or have a State code that
does not apply to all commercial
buildings. If local building energy codes
regulate commercial building design
and construction rather than a State
code, the State must review and make
all reasonable efforts to update as
authorized those local codes to
determine whether they meet or exceed
the 2010 edition of Standard 90.1. States
may base their certifications on
reasonable actions by units of general
purpose local government. Each such
State must still review the information
obtained from the local governments
and gather any additional data and
testimony for its own certification.
Note that the applicability of any
State revisions to new or existing
buildings would be governed by the
State building codes. However, it is our
understanding that generally, the
revisions would not apply to existing
buildings unless they are undergoing a
change that requires a building permit.
States should be aware that the DOE
considers high-rise (greater than three
stories) multi-family residential
buildings, hotel, motel, and other
transient residential building types of
any height as commercial buildings for
energy code purposes. Consequently,
commercial buildings, for the purposes
of certification, would include high-rise
(greater than three stories) multi-family
residential buildings, hotel, motel, and
other transient residential building
types of any height.
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B. Certification
Section 304(b) of ECPA, as amended,
requires each State to certify to the
Secretary of Energy that it has reviewed
and updated the provisions of its
commercial building energy code
regarding energy efficiency to meet or
exceed the Standard 90.1–2010 edition.
(42 U.S.C 6833(b)) Today’s final
determination is being published before
the 2 year deadline to file a certification
for the 2007 positive determination;
therefore, a state may file just one
certification to address both
determinations. The certification must
include a demonstration that the
provisions of the State’s commercial
building energy code regarding energy
efficiency meet or exceed Standard
90.1–2010. If a State intends to certify
that its commercial building energy
code already meets or exceeds the
requirements of Standard 90.1–2010, the
State should provide an explanation of
the basis for this certification, e.g.,
Standard 90.1–2010 is incorporated by
reference in the State’s building code
regulations. The chief executive of the
State (e.g., the Governor) or a designated
State official, such as the Director of the
State energy office, State code
commission, utility commission, or
equivalent State agency having primary
responsibility for commercial building
energy codes, is to provide the
certification to the Secretary. Such a
designated State official also is to
provide the certifications regarding the
codes of units of general purpose local
government based on information
provided by responsible local officials.
Certifications are to be sent to the
address provided in the ADDRESSES
section.
DOE does list the States that have
filed certifications and those that have
or have not adopted new codes on the
DOE Energy Efficiency and Renewable
Energy Web site at https://
www.energycodes.gov/states/. Once a
State has adopted a new commercial
code, DOE typically provides software,
training, and support for the new code
as long as the new code is based on the
national model codes (in this case,
ASHRAE Standard 90.1).
Some States develop their own codes
that are only loosely related to the
national model codes and DOE does not
typically provide technical support for
those codes. However, DOE does
provide grants to these States through
grant programs administered by the
National Energy Technology Laboratory
(NETL). DOE does not prescribe how
each State adopts and enforces its
energy codes.
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C. Request for Extensions To Certify
Section 304(c) of ECPA, requires that
the Secretary permit an extension of the
deadline for complying with the
certification requirements described
above, if a State can demonstrate that it
has made a good faith effort to comply
with such requirements and that it has
made significant progress toward
meeting its certification obligations. (42
U.S.C. 6833(c)) Such demonstrations
could include one or both of the
following: (1) A plan for response to the
requirements stated in section 304; or
(2) a statement that the State has
appropriated or requested funds (within
State funding procedures) to implement
a plan that would respond to the
requirements of Section 304 of ECPA.
This list is not exhaustive. Requests are
to be sent to the address provided in the
ADDRESSES section.
IV. Regulatory Analysis
A. Review Under Executive Order 12866
Today’s action is not a significant
regulatory action under section 3(f)(1) of
Executive Order 12866, ‘‘Regulatory
Planning and Review’’ (58 FR 51735;
October 4, 1993). Accordingly, today’s
action was not subject to review by the
Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs (OIRA) in the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB).
B. Review Under the Regulatory
Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.) requires the
preparation of an initial regulatory
flexibility analysis for any rule that by
law must be proposed for public
comment, unless the agency certifies
that the rule, if promulgated, will not
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.
As required by Executive Order 13272,
‘‘Proper Consideration of Small Entities
in Agency Rulemaking,’’ (67 FR 53461
(Aug. 16, 2002)), DOE published
procedures and policies on February 19,
2003, to ensure that the potential
impacts of its rules on small entities are
properly considered during the
rulemaking process (68 FR 7990). DOE
has made its procedures and policies
available on the Office of General
Counsel’s Web site: https://
www.gc.doe.gov.
DOE has reviewed today’s final
determination under the provisions of
the Regulatory Flexibility Act and the
procedures and policies published on
February 19, 2003. Since today’s action
on the determination of improved
energy efficiency between the 2007 and
2010 editions of Standard 90.1 is now
finalized by DOE, it requires States to
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undertake an analysis of their respective
building codes. As such, the only
entities directly regulated by this final
determination would be States. DOE
does not believe that there will be any
direct impacts on small entities such as
small businesses, small organizations, or
small governmental jurisdictions.
On the basis of the foregoing, DOE
certifies that this final determination
would not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities. Accordingly, DOE has not
prepared a regulatory flexibility analysis
for this final determination. DOE’s
certification and supporting statement
of factual basis will be provided to the
Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small
Business Administration pursuant to 5
U.S.C. 605(b).
C. Review Under the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969
Today’s action is covered under the
Categorical Exclusion found in DOE’s
National Environmental Policy Act
regulations at paragraph A.6. of
Appendix A to subpart D, 10 CFR part
1021. That Categorical Exclusion
applies to actions that are strictly
procedural, such as rulemaking
establishing the administration of
grants. Today’s action is required by
Title III of ECPA, as amended, which
provides that whenever the Standard
90.1–1989, or any successor to that
code, is revised, the Secretary must
make a determination, not later than 12
months after such revision, whether the
revised code would improve energy
efficiency in commercial buildings and
must publish notice of such
determination in the Federal Register.
(42 U.S.C. 6833(b)(2)(A)) If the Secretary
determines that the revision of Standard
90.1–1989 or any successor thereof,
improves the level of energy efficiency
in commercial buildings then no later
than two years after the date of the
publication of such affirmative
determination, each State is required to
certify that it has reviewed and updated
the provisions of its commercial
building code regarding energy
efficiency with respect to the revised or
successor code. (42 U.S.C.
6833(b)(2)(B)(i)) If the Secretary makes a
determination that the revised standard
will not improve energy efficiency in
commercial buildings then State
commercial codes shall meet or exceed
the last revised standard for which the
Secretary has made a positive
determination. (42 U.S.C.
6833(b)(2)(B)(ii)) Therefore, DOE has
preliminarily determined that the
Secretary’s determination is not a major
federal action that would have direct
environmental impacts. Accordingly,
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DOE has not prepared an environmental
assessment or an environmental impact
statement.
D. Review Under Executive Order
13132, ‘‘Federalism’’
Executive Order 13132, 64 FR 43255
(Aug 4, 1999), imposes certain
requirements on agencies formulating
and implementing policies or
regulations that pre-empt State law or
that have federalism implications.
Agencies are required to examine the
constitutional and statutory authority
supporting any action that would limit
the policymaking discretion of the
States and carefully assess the necessity
for such actions.
DOE has reviewed the statutory
authority. Congress found that:
(1) Large amounts of fuel and energy
are consumed unnecessarily each year
in heating, cooling, ventilating, and
providing domestic hot water for newly
constructed residential and commercial
buildings because such buildings lack
adequate energy conservation features;
(2) Federal voluntary performance
standards for newly constructed
buildings can prevent such waste of
energy, which the Nation can no longer
afford in view of its current and
anticipated energy shortage;
(3) the failure to provide adequate
energy conservation measures in newly
constructed buildings increases longterm operating costs that may affect
adversely the repayment of, and security
for, loans made, insured, or guaranteed
by Federal agencies or made by
federally insured or regulated
instrumentalities; and
(4) State and local building codes or
similar controls can provide an existing
means by which to assure, in
coordination with other building
requirements and with a minimum of
Federal interference in State and local
transactions, that newly constructed
buildings contain adequate energy
conservation features. (42 U.S.C. 6831)
Pursuant to Section 304(b) of ECPA,
DOE is statutorily required to determine
whether the most recent versions of
ASHRAE 90.1 would improve the level
of energy efficiency in commercial
buildings as compared to the previous
version. If DOE makes a positive
determination, the statute requires each
State to certify that it has reviewed and
updated the provisions of its
commercial building code regarding
energy efficiency with respect to the
revised or successor codes. (42 U.S.C.
6833(b)(2)(B)(i))
Executive Order 13132, 64 FR 43255
(August 4, 1999) requires meaningful
and timely input by State and local
officials in the development of
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64921
regulatory policies that have federalism
implications unless ‘‘funds necessary to
pay the direct costs incurred by the
State and local governments in
complying with the regulation are
provided by the Federal Government.’’
(62 FR 43257) Pursuant to section 304(e)
of ECPA, the DOE Secretary is required
to ‘‘provide incentive funding to States
to implement the requirements of
[Section 304], and to improve and
implement State residential and
commercial building energy efficiency
codes, including increasing and
verifying compliance with such codes.
In determining whether, and in what
amount, to provide incentive funding
under this subsection, the Secretary
shall consider the actions proposed by
the State to implement the requirements
of this section, to improve and
implement residential and commercial
building energy efficiency codes, and to
promote building energy efficiency
through the use of such codes.’’ (42
U.S.C. 6833(e)) Therefore, consultation
with States and local officials regarding
this final determination was not
required.
However, DOE notes that State and
local governments were invited to
participate in the development Standard
90.1–2010. Standard 90.1–2010, was
developed in a national ANSI consensus
process open to the public and in which
State and local governments participate
along with DOE and other interested
parties. It is the product of a series of
amendments to the prior addition of the
standard. Each addendum is put out for
national public review. Anyone may
submit comments, and in the process
comments were received from State and
local governments. Comments on the
addendum are received, reviewed and
resolved through a consensus process.
Members of the standards project
committee have included
representatives of State and local
governments.
DOE annually holds a national
building energy codes workshop at
which the progress on development of
the model energy codes are presented,
along with discussion and sharing of
problems and successes in adoption,
implementation, and enforcement of
building energy codes. The predominate
attendance of these workshops are State
and local officials responsible for
building energy codes. They are
consistently encouraged and urged to
participate in the model building energy
code processes, which will be the
subject of DOE’s next determinations
under section 304 of ECPA. Thus, State
and local officials have had the
opportunity to participate in the
development of the standard through
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the ASHRAE process. Some have done
so.
Similarly, the comments of States and
local governments about provisions of
the developing Standard 90.1–2010
were received in formal comment
periods and heard and addressed in
ASHRAE committee deliberations open
to the public. In addition, concerns and
issues about adoption, implementation
and enforcement issues were presented
and discussed at informal sessions at
the Department’s annual national
workshops on building energy codes.
DOE believes that the above process has
given State and local jurisdictions
extensive opportunity to comment on
and express their concerns on Standard
90.1–2010, the subject of this
determination.
On issuance of a final determination
that Standard 90.1–2010 would improve
the energy efficiency of commercial
buildings, ECPA requires the States to
certify to the Secretary that it has
reviewed and updated the provisions of
its commercial building code regarding
energy efficiency to meet or exceed the
requirements of Standard 90.1–2010.
DOE notes that ECPA sets forth this
requirement for States. (42 U.S.C.
6833(b)(2)(B)(i)) States are given broad
freedom to either adopt Standard 90.1–
2010 or develop their own code that
meets equivalent energy efficiency.
E. Review Under the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995
The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 (Pub. L. 104–4) generally
requires Federal agencies to examine
closely the impacts of regulatory actions
on State, local, and tribal governments.
Subsection 101(5) of Title I of that law
defines a Federal intergovernmental
mandate to include any regulation that
would impose upon State, local, or
tribal governments an enforceable duty,
except a condition of Federal assistance
or a duty arising from participating in a
voluntary Federal program. Title II of
that law requires each Federal agency to
assess the effects of Federal regulatory
actions on State, local, and tribal
governments, in the aggregate, or to the
private sector, other than to the extent
such actions merely incorporate
requirements specifically set forth in a
statute. Section 202 of that title requires
a Federal agency to perform a detailed
assessment of the anticipated costs and
benefits of any rule that includes a
Federal mandate which may result in
costs to State, local, or tribal
governments, or to the private sector, of
$100 million or more. Section 204 of
that title requires each agency that
proposes a rule containing a significant
Federal intergovernmental mandate to
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develop an effective process for
obtaining meaningful and timely input
from elected officers of State, local, and
tribal governments.
Upon publication of this affirmative
final determination, each State is
required under section 304 of ECPA to
review and update, as necessary, the
provisions of its commercial building
energy code to meet or exceed the
provisions of the 2010 edition of
Standard 90.1. (42 U.S.C.
6833(b)(2)(B)(i)) Section 304 of ECPA
requires State action in response to this
positive determination by DOE. The
statutory requirements of ECPA require
DOE to provide a determination
irrespective of costs. While the
processes that States may undertake to
update their codes vary widely, as a
general rule a State at a minimum needs
to:
• Evaluate Standard 90.1–2010 using
the background material provided by
DOE
• Compare the existing State
commercial building energy code to
Standard 90.1–2010 to see if an update
is needed
• Update the State commercial
building energy code to meet or exceed
Standard 90.1–2010.
DOE evaluated the potential for State
activity to exceed $100 million in any
one year. The approach looked at the
three steps for minimum activity listed
in the previous paragraph—evaluate,
compare and update. A fourth potential
step of providing training on the new
code was also considered as some States
may consider training on the new code
to be an integral part of adopting the
new code. For the three steps of
minimum activity, DOE estimated the
following:
Evaluate Standard 90.1–2010—DOE
estimated a minimum of 8 hours of
review per State and a maximum review
time of 500 hours of review per State
(12.5 work weeks). The minimum
review time of 8 hours (one day) is the
estimated minimum amount of time
DOE can see States taking to review
Standard 90.1–2010. Reading and
reviewing the Federal Register notice,
the qualitative analysis document and
the quantitative analysis document will
take the average person several hours.
Deciding on whether or not to upgrade
to Standard 90.1–2010 may take another
couple of hours. The maximum review
time of 500 hours (62.5 day, 3 working
months) upper limit was estimated as
the amount of time that a State that was
not familiar with energy codes at all or
which has a particularly arduous review
process within the State would take to
review these documents.
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(1) A cost per hour of $100 per hour
was assumed based on actual rates
proposed in subcontracts associated
with compliance studies funded by
DOE. The average rate calculated from
these subcontracts for 10 types of
building officials from 6 states was
$93.41, so DOE chose to round this up
to $100 per hour.
a. Low estimate—8 hours × 50 states ×
$100 per hour = $40,000.
b. High estimate—500 hours × 50 states
× $100 per hour = $2,500,000.
(2) Compare Standard 90.1–2010 to
existing state code—Assuming the State
is familiar with its code and has
performed an effective evaluation of
Standard 90.1 in the first step, the range
of potential costs should be similar to
Step 1. (See Step 1 for discussion of 8
hour and 500 hour times and $100 per
hour cost estimate).
a. Low estimate—8 hours × 50 states ×
$100 per hour = $40,000.
b. High estimate—500 hours × 50 states
× $100 per hour = $2,500,000.
(3) Update the State Codes to meet or
exceed Standard 90.1–2010—Adopting
a new energy code could be as simple
as updating an order within the State, or
it could be very complex involving
hearings, testimony, etc. Again, the
range of potential costs should be
similar to Step 1. (See Step 1 for
discussion of origin of 8 hour and 500
hour times and $100 per hour cost
estimate).
a. Low estimate—8 hours × 50 states ×
$100 per hour = $40,000.
b. High estimate—500 hours × 50 states
× $100 per hour = $2,500,000.
The potential range of total costs
States to under these assumptions
would be $120,000 to $7.5 million. This
range is well below the $100 million
threshold in the Unfunded Mandates
Act. DOE has also considered potential
costs were States to provide training on
the new code.
(4) Train Code officials on New
Code—Assuming every jurisdiction has
at least one person that needs to be
trained on energy code. There are
roughly 40,000 general purpose local
governments, or jurisdictions, in the
U.S.. The total number of jurisdictions
in the U.S. that enforce energy codes is
not known with any degree of certainty.
The National League of Cities publishes
an estimate of the number of local
governments in the U.S. at https://
www.nlc.org/build-skills-networks/
resources/cities-101/number-of-localgovernments—population-distribution.
Their summary indicates the following:
• 19,492 Municipal governments;
• 16,519 Town or Township
governments;
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• 3,033 County governments;
• 13,726 School districts; and
• 37,381 Special district
governments.
(5) DOE believes it is reasonable to
assume that all of the municipal
governments, town or township
governments, and county governments
could be required to acquire training on
Standard 90.1–2010 in order to enforce
this standard as an adopted energy code.
In addition, the 50 state governments
would be required to acquire training.
This number adds up to
19,429+16,504+3,033+50 = 39,094.
Another widely mentioned estimate of
the total number of code adopting
jurisdictions in the U.S. is 44,000. This
number is based on the National
Conference of States on Building Codes
and Standards (NCBCS). See, for
example, https://www.ncsbcs.org/
newsite/New%20Releases/
RW_Presentation_060602.htm. Both
these estimates are in reasonable
agreement and so DOE assumed that
there are 40,000 potential jurisdictions
that potentially would need training on
a new energy code.
Based on training experiences of the
Building Energy Codes Program staff,
with conducting training sessions for
jurisdictional staff regarding Standard
90.1, one full-day (8 hours) of training
is normally sufficient. Therefore, DOE
has used 8 hours as a low estimate and
16 hours as a high estimate for training
hours required if a jurisdiction were to
adopt Standard 90.1–2010.
a. Low estimate—8 hours × 40,000
jurisdictions × $100 per hour =
$32,000,000.
b. High Estimate—16 hours × 40,000
jurisdictions × $100 per hour =
$64,000,000.
Accordingly, DOE has concluded that it
is not necessary to prepare a Family
Policymaking Assessment.
G. Review Under the Treasury and
General Government Appropriations
Act of 2001
Section 515 of the Treasury and
General Government Appropriations
Act, 2001 (44 U.S.C. 3516, note)
provides for agencies to review most
disseminations of information to the
public under guidelines established by
each agency pursuant to general
guidelines issued by OMB. OMB’s
guidelines were published at 67 FR
8452 (Feb. 22, 2002), and DOE’s
guidelines were published at 67 FR
62446 (Oct. 7, 2002). DOE has reviewed
today’s action under the OMB and DOE
guidelines and has concluded that it is
consistent with applicable policies in
those guidelines.
F. Review Under the Treasury and
General Government Appropriations
Act of 1999
H. Review Under Executive Order 13211
Executive Order 13211, ‘‘Actions
Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use,’’ 66 FR 28355 (May
22, 2001), requires Federal agencies to
prepare and submit to the OMB a
Statement of Energy Effects for any
proposed significant energy action. A
‘‘significant energy action’’ is defined as
any action by an agency that
promulgated or is expected to lead to
promulgation of a final rule, and that:
(1) Is a significant regulatory action
under Executive Order 12866, or any
successor order; and (2) Is likely to have
a significant adverse effect on the
supply, distribution, or use of energy; or
(3) Is designated by the Administrator of
the Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs (OIRA) as a significant energy
action. For any proposed significant
energy action, the agency must give a
detailed statement of any adverse effects
on energy supply, distribution, or use,
should the proposal be implemented,
and of reasonable alternatives to the
action and their expected benefits on
energy supply, distribution, and use.
Today’s action would not have a
significant adverse effect on the supply,
distribution, or use of energy and is
therefore not a significant energy action.
Accordingly, DOE has not prepared a
Statement of Energy Effects.
Section 654 of the Treasury and
General Government Appropriations
Act of 1999 (Pub. L. 105–277) requires
Federal agencies to issue a Family
Policymaking Assessment for any rule
that may affect family well-being.
Today’s action would not have any
impact on the autonomy or integrity of
the family as an institution.
I. Review Under Executive Order 13175
Executive Order 13175. ‘‘Consultation
and Coordination with Indian tribal
Governments’’ (65 FR 67249 (Nov. 9,
2000)), requires DOE to develop an
accountable process to ensure
‘‘meaningful and timely input by tribal
officials in the development of
regulatory policies that have tribal
emcdonald on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Adding the potential training costs of
$32 million to $64 million to the costs
for the three steps indicates a potential
total costs ranging from $32.12 million
to $71.5 million. The high end of this
estimate is less than the $100 million
threshold in the Unfunded Mandates
Act. Accordingly, no further action is
required under the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act of 1995.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:56 Oct 18, 2011
Jkt 226001
PO 00000
Frm 00032
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
64923
implications.’’ ‘‘Policies that have tribal
implications’’ refers to regulations that
have ‘‘substantial direct effects on one
or more Indian tribes, on the
relationship between the Federal
Government and Indian tribes, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities between the Federal
Government and Indian tribes.’’
Today’s action is not a policy that has
‘‘tribal implications’’ under Executive
Order 13175. DOE has reviewed today’s
action under Executive Order 13175 and
has determined that it is consistent with
applicable policies of that Executive
Order.
Issued in Washington, DC, on October 12,
2011.
Henry Kelly,
Acting Assistant Secretary, Energy Efficiency
and Renewable Energy.
[FR Doc. 2011–27057 Filed 10–18–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Unconventional Resources
Technology Advisory Committee
Office of Fossil Energy,
Department of Energy.
ACTION: Notice of open meeting.
AGENCY:
This notice announces a
meeting of the Unconventional
Resources Technology Advisory
Committee. The Federal Advisory
Committee Act (Pub. L. 92–463, 86 Stat.
770) requires that notice of this meeting
be announced in the Federal Register.
DATES: Thursday, October 27, 2011; 11
a.m. to 1 p.m. (EDT).
ADDRESSES: U.S. Department of Energy,
1000 Independence Avenue, SW.,
Washington, DC 20585.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Elena Melchert, U.S. Department of
Energy, Office of Oil and Natural Gas,
Washington, DC 20585. Phone: (202)
586–5600.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Purpose of the Committee: The
purpose of the Unconventional
Resources Technology Advisory
Committee is to provide advice on
development and implementation of
programs related to onshore
unconventional natural gas and other
petroleum resources to the Secretary of
Energy and provide comments and
recommendations and priorities for the
Department of Energy Annual Plan per
requirements of the Energy Policy Act of
2005, Title IX, Subtitle J, section 999.
SUMMARY:
Tentative Agenda
10:30 a.m.
E:\FR\FM\19OCN1.SGM
Registration.
19OCN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 76, Number 202 (Wednesday, October 19, 2011)]
[Notices]
[Pages 64904-64923]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2011-27057]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
[Docket No. EERE-2006-BC-0132]
RIN 1904-AC42
Building Energy Standards Program: Final Determination Regarding
Energy Efficiency Improvements in the Energy Standard for Buildings,
Except Low-Rise Residential Buildings, ANSI/ASHRAE/IESNA Standard 90.1-
2010
AGENCY: Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, Department of
Energy.
ACTION: Notice of final determination.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Department of Energy (DOE or Department) has determined
that the 2010 edition of the Energy Standard for Buildings, Except Low-
Rise Residential Buildings, American National Standards Institute
(ANSI)/American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning
Engineers (ASHRAE) Illuminating Engineering Society of North America
(IESNA) Standard 90.1-2010, (Standard 90.1-2010 or the 2010 edition)
would achieve greater energy efficiency in buildings subject to the
code, than the 2007 edition (Standard 90.1-2007 or the 2007 edition).
Also, DOE has determined that the quantitative analysis of the energy
consumption of buildings built to Standard 90.1-2010, as compared with
buildings built to Standard 90.1-2007, indicates national source energy
savings of approximately 18.2 percent of commercial building energy
consumption. Additionally, DOE has determined site energy savings are
estimated to be approximately 18.5 percent. Upon publication of this
affirmative final determination, States are required to certify that
they have reviewed the provisions of their commercial building code
regarding energy efficiency, and as necessary, updated their code to
meet or exceed Standard 90.1-2010. Additionally, this notice provides
guidance to States on Certifications, and Requests for Extensions of
Deadlines for Certification Statements.
DATES: Certification statements by the States must be provided by
October 18, 2013.
ADDRESSES: Certification Statements must be addressed to the Buildings
Technologies Program-Building Energy Codes Program Manager, U.S.
Department of Energy, Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy,
Forrestal Building, Mail Station EE-2J, 1000 Independence Avenue, SW.,
Washington, DC 20585-0121.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Michael Erbesfeld, U.S. Department of
Energy, Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, Forrestal
Building, Mail Station EE-2J, 1000 Independence Avenue, SW.,
Washington, DC 20585-0121, (202) 287-1874, e-mail:
michael.erbesfeld@ee.doe.gov. For legal issues contact Kavita
Vaidyanathan, U.S. Department of Energy, Office of the General Counsel,
Forrestal Building, GC-71, 1000 Independence Avenue, SW., Washington,
DC 20585, (202) 586-0669, e-mail: kavita.vaidyanathan@hq.doe.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Introduction
A. Statutory Requirements
B. Background
1. Publication of Standard 90.1-2010
2. Preliminary Determination
3. Public Comments Regarding the Preliminary Determination
II. Summary of the Comparative Analysis
A. Qualitative Analysis
1. Discussion of Detailed Textual Analysis
2. Results of Detailed Textual Analysis
B. Quantitative Analysis
1. Discussion of Whole Building Energy Analysis
2. Results of Whole Building Energy Analysis
C. Final Determination Statement
III. Filing Certification Statements With DOE
A. Review and Update
B. Certification
C. Requests for Extensions To Certify
IV. Regulatory Analysis
A. Review Under Executive Order 12866
B. Review Under the Regulatory Flexibility Act
C. Review Under the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969
D. Review Under Executive Order 13132, ``Federalism''
E. Review Under the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
F. Review Under the Treasury and General Government
Appropriations Act of 1999
G. Review Under the Treasury and General Government
Appropriations Act of 2001
H. Review Under Executive Order 13211
I. Review Under Executive Order 13175
I. Introduction
A. Statutory Requirements
Title III of the Energy Conservation and Production Act, as amended
(ECPA), establishes requirements for the
[[Page 64905]]
Building Energy Efficiency Standards Program. (42 U.S.C. 6831 et seq.)
Section 304(b), as amended, of ECPA provides that whenever the ANSI/
ASHRAE/IESNA Standard 90.1-1989 (Standard 90.1-1989 or 1989 edition),
or any successor to that code, is revised, the Secretary must make a
determination, not later than 12 months after such revision, whether
the revised code would improve energy efficiency in commercial
buildings and must publish notice of such determination in the Federal
Register. (42 U.S.C. 6833 (b)(2)(A)) The Secretary may determine that
the revision of Standard 90.1-1989 or any successor thereof, improves
the level of energy efficiency in commercial buildings. If so, then not
later than two years after the date of the publication of such
affirmative determination, each State is required to certify that it
has reviewed and updated the provisions of its commercial building code
regarding energy efficiency with respect to the revised or successor
code. (42 U.S.C. 6833(b)(2)(B)(i)) The State must include in its
certification a demonstration that the provisions of its commercial
building code, regarding energy efficiency, meet or exceed the revised
standard. (42 U.S.C. 6833(b)(2)(B)(i))
If the Secretary makes a determination that the revised standard
will not improve energy efficiency in commercial buildings, State
commercial codes must meet or exceed the last revised standard for
which the Secretary has made a positive determination. (42 U.S.C.
6833(b)(2)(B)(ii)). On July 20, 2011, the DOE published a determination
in the Federal Register updating the reference code to Standard 90.1-
2007. See 76 FR 43287 (July 20, 2011).
ECPA also requires the Secretary to permit extensions of the
deadlines for the State certification if a State can demonstrate that
it has made a good faith effort to comply with the requirements of
section 304(c) of ECPA and that it has made significant progress in
doing so. (42 U.S.C. 6833(c))
B. Background
1. Publication of Standard 90.1-2010
ASHRAE and the IESNA approved the publication of the 2010 edition
of Energy Standard for Buildings Except Low-rise Residential Buildings,
in October 2010.
The Standard was developed under ANSI-approved consensus standard
procedures. Standard 90.1 is under continuous maintenance by a Standing
Standard Project Committee (SSPC) for which the ASHRAE Standard
Committee has established a documented program for regular publication
of addenda or revisions, including procedures for timely, documented,
consensus action on requests for change to any part of the standard.
ANSI approves addenda prior to their publication by ASHRAE and IESNA
and prior to their inclusion in a new version of Standard 90.1. ANSI
approved the final addendum for inclusion in Standard 90.1-2010 on July
24, 2010. Appeals were made to several addenda and the results of the
appeals process were not final until October 15, 2010. The 2010 edition
was published on October 28, 2010.
2. Preliminary Determination
In arriving at a preliminary determination, DOE first reviewed all
significant changes between the 2010 edition and the 2007 edition.
Standard 90.1 is complex and covers a broad spectrum of the energy
related components and systems in buildings ranging from simple storage
buildings to complex hospitals and laboratories. The size of buildings
addressed range from those smaller than single family homes to the
largest buildings in the world. The approach to development of the
standard used in the 2010 edition was not changed from that used for
the 2007 edition, with no changes to the scope or the way components
are defined. DOE preliminarily determined that because no significant
changes were made to the structure, scope, or component definitions of
Standard 90.1-2007, a similar methodology used for the analysis of
Standard 90.1-2007 could be utilized for the analysis of Standard 90.1-
2010, consisting of a qualitative comparison of the textual changes to
requirements in Standard 90.1-2010 from Standard 90.1-2007, and a
quantitative estimate of the energy savings developed from whole
building simulations of a standard set of buildings constructed to both
Standards over a range of U.S. climates. DOE used an extension of the
procedure used for the Standard 90.1-2007 determination for the
quantitative estimate of energy savings. The extension was that
additional building types were added to the analysis. DOE used the same
simulation tool and data for weighing the results by building type and
climate as used for the 90.1-2007 determination.
A detailed discussion of the analysis methodology, which was
subject to public comment in 2010 and 2011, can be found in the Notice
of Preliminary Determination for Standard 90.1-2007 and in the Notice
of Preliminary Determination for Standard 90.1-2010. 75 FR 54117 (Sept.
3, 2010) and 76 FR 43299 (July 20, 2011) respectively.
3. Public Comments Regarding the Preliminary Determination
DOE accepted public comments on the preliminary determination for
Standard 90.1-2010 until August 19, 2011. DOE received submissions from
a total of six different entities.
The Edison Electric Institute (EEI) submitted a written comment
(Docket No. EERE-2010-BT-DET-0050-0002, pgs. 1-3) supporting the
preliminary determination while stating the following four issues: (1)
DOE should only use the results from its site energy analysis and its
energy cost analysis to make its final determination, and not report
the source energy analysis results in the final determination, (2) the
energy savings, or at least a portion of the estimated energy savings,
from addenda that include new federal energy efficiency standards or
provide updates to energy efficiency standards should be incorporated
into the final determination analysis, (3) EEI would request that the
information about the impact of addendum ``bu'' be included in the
final determination notice, and (4) in terms of primary energy
associated with electricity, the value in this notice is overstated and
that DOE should use a more realistic ratio for electricity in its
estimates.
In regards to EEI's first comment, the Department still believes
that despite the fact that the source energy analysis results are
estimates, it is important to the discussion of global resources and
environmental issues to report them. Source energy (or primary energy)
addresses the energy needed to deliver energy to the building in
addition to the energy used at the building and thus provides a more
complete view of the total energy expenditure used by a building than
site energy. However, DOE realizes that site energy is the energy that
typically appears on utility bills and that is seen by the consumer.
DOE also realizes that it is energy cost (as shown on energy bills) to
which many consumers react. It is for this reason that DOE provides all
three metrics--site energy, source energy, and energy cost--in its
determinations.
EEI's second comment is in reference to the fact that the
Department does not include the impact from new or updated federal
energy efficiency standards in its determination of energy savings. For
the quantitative analysis performed for the 90.1-2010 preliminary
determination (https://www.energycodes.gov/status/documents/QuantitativeAnalysisReport901-2010Determination.pdf), DOE
[[Page 64906]]
incorporated only addenda that modified the prescriptive requirements
of the Standard. New or updated federal efficiency standards are not
independent requirements of the standard, but rather reflections of
Federal manufacturing requirements. In specific circumstances,
particularly with regard to requirements for certain heating,
ventilation, and air conditioning (HVAC) equipment, addenda to Standard
90.1-2010 reflect changes to national manufacturing standards
previously developed by DOE or enacted independently through Federal
legislation. The energy savings that are attributable to these national
manufacturing standards would accrue no matter what version of Standard
90.1 is considered and regardless of whether they are reflected in the
text of the Standards, therefore DOE has not incorporated these as
changes contributing to energy savings for the purpose of the
Determination.
EEI's third comment requests that information regarding the impact
of addendum ``bu'' be included in the final determination. Addendum
``bu'' added equipment efficiency requirements for mechanical equipment
serving computer rooms, however none of the prototype building models
that DOE uses in its simulations have data centers and therefore the
quantifiable impact of this addendum was not captured. DOE does note
that the impact of addendum ``bu'' is captured in the qualitative, or
text comparison analysis, where addendum ``bu'' is listed as a major
positive and noted as a new efficiency requirement. When the prototype
building models used in this determination were developed by DOE and
later reviewed by ASHRAE, no data center models were included because
at that point Standard 90.1 did not include efficiency requirements
related to data centers. DOE did not add data centers to the prototype
building models for this determination because the quantitative impact
of this addendum would not change the fact that this is a positive
final determination of energy savings. DOE is considering adding data
centers to the prototype building models for future determinations.
EEI's final comment suggests that DOE use a more realistic
electricity ratio for determining primary energy associated with
electricity production by crediting renewable energy production on the
primary side of generation and on the on-site/delivered side of
electricity consumption. The Department has chosen to be consistent
within their energy analyses by using Energy Information
Administration's (EIA) data and conversion factors solely and by
choosing not to mix and match conversion factors. DOE recognizes that
these conversion factors are estimates and that some types of utility
energy inputs do not have known conversion factors and other inputs
have multiple generally accepted conversion factors. The Department has
chosen not to subtract primary renewable energy from the delivered
electricity losses value because renewable energy generated as primary
energy is still subject to losses in the delivery process to the site.
Also, DOE has chosen not to add on-site generated renewable energy to
the delivered electricity value when determining the electricity ratio
because on-site generated renewable energy is not subject to the losses
that are incurred when delivering primary energy from the plant to the
site. Therefore the delivered electricity and delivered electricity
loss values used in the preliminary determination are the same values
used in this final determination and yield the electricity ratio of
3.2, explained on page 31-32 of this notice, for converting how much
primary (source) electricity is required per unit of site required
electricity.
The Gas Technology Institute (GTI) submitted a written comment
(Docket No. EERE-2010-BT-DET-0050-0005, pg. 1) stating that it supports
the analysis and states that until ASHRAE 90.1 addresses issues related
to full fuel-cycle energy metrics and a single baseline building
budget, the DOE preliminary determination is incomplete and misleading.
The Department's preliminary determination does estimate source
energy metrics, and DOE has not chosen to use a single baseline
building budget because there are a multitude of building types with
far different operating requirements and accompanying energy needs. A
single baseline building budget would penalize certain building types
while aiding other building types depending on how far away their
respective baseline budgets were from a single average baseline budget.
DOE also notes that while DOE has recently issued a notice of
proposed policy (NOPP) related to full-fuel-cycle analysis for
appliance and equipment standards (76 FR 51281, Docket No. EERE-2010-
BT-NOA-0028, ``Energy Conservation Program for Consumer Products and
Certain Commercial and Industrial Equipment: Statement of Policy for
Adopting Full-Fuel-Cycle Analyses Into Energy Conservation Standards
Program''), this policy was not proposed for application to building
energy codes and standards such as Standard 90.1. This policy was a
direct offshoot of the National Academy of Sciences report discussed in
conjunction with the comment below from Laclede Gas Company. DOE notes
that GTI's comment takes issue with standard 90.1. DOE's role in
determinations is to compare the latest version of Standard 90.1 with
the previous version and to determine if the latest version improves
the level of energy efficiency in commercial buildings over the
previous version. While DOE is a participant in the Standard 90.1
development process, DOE does not control the content of Standard 90.1.
The American Gas Association submitted a written comment (Docket
No. EERE-2010-BT-DET-0050-0004, pg. 1) stating that the performance
requirements for commercial electric storage water heaters greater then
12kW appear to be less stringent than the current federal minimum
efficiency requirements for this class of water heaters.
DOE acknowledges the discrepancy between Federal standards for
commercial electric storage water heaters and the requirements for this
equipment in Standard 90.1-2010. For the purposes of this determination
the performance requirements for commercial electric storage water
heaters greater than 12kW in ASHRAE 90.1-2010 are not applicable as
this determination is only concerned with whether the 90.1-2010 version
improves the level of energy efficiency in commercial buildings
compared to the 2007 version of 90.1, and the performance requirements
of this equipment did not change from the 2007 to 2010 version.
The Laclede Gas Company submitted a written comment (Docket No.
EERE-2010-BT-DET-0050-0007, pgs. 1-5) stating the following three
issues: (1) Laclede contends there is a conflict of interest because
DOE evaluates new versions of the ASHRAE 90.1 through its Pacific
Northwest National Lab (PNNL), the staff of which participate in ASHRAE
committees; (2) Laclede objects ``to the site-based energy efficiency
metric because it does not fulfill the `scientific integrity'
objectives as ordered by the Presidential Scientific Integrity
Memorandum of March 9, 2009''; and (3) Laclede is concerned that ``DOE
has limited its `Statement of Policy' for implementing the National
Academy of Sciences (NAS) conclusions to the minimum efficiency
standards of appliances. Laclede contends that the NAS conclusions
should also apply to building efficiency standards.''
In response to Laclede's first issue, DOE acknowledges that staff
members at
[[Page 64907]]
PNNL participate in ASHRAE. However, the determination analyses were
reviewed by DOE management.
In response to Laclede's second issue, DOE believes that its
determination on Standard 90.1-2010 has indeed followed the
requirements of the Presidential Memorandum on Scientific Integrity.
DOE has subjected the scientific and technological information it
considered in this determination to well-established scientific
processes and DOE made available to the public the scientific and
technological findings and conclusions considered or relied on in this
final determination by way of the preliminary determination and public
comment period. DOE provides all three metrics--site energy, source
energy, and energy cost--in its determinations. DOE does not mandate
energy efficiency standards which give electric resistance heat an
efficiency advantage over natural gas. DOE's role in determinations is
to compare the latest version of Standard 90.1 with the previous
version and to determine if the latest version improves the level of
energy efficiency in commercial buildings over the previous version.
In response to Laclede's third issue, DOE interprets the phrase
``NAS conclusions'' to refer to the National Academy of Sciences (NAS)
report entitled ``Review of Site (Point-of-Use) and Full-Fuel-Cycle
Measurement Approaches to DOE/EERE Building Appliance Energy-Efficiency
Standards--Letter Report (2009) (available at https://books.nap.edu/openbook.php?record_id=12670&page=1). DOE has not limited its
``Statement of Policy'' because this NAS report is for the application
to ``building appliances'' where DOE has statutory authority to set
building appliance standards, and does not apply to determinations of
energy efficiency for building energy codes. Today's determination is
based on a review of the work of ASHRAE, as required by statute, and
does not establish the efficiency standards of the ASHRAE code.
The Building Codes Assistance Project (BCAP) submitted a written
comment (Docket No. EERE-2010-BT-DET-0050-0003, pgs. 1-2) supporting
the DOE's determination and suggests that DOE follow up with the States
after publication of the Final Determination as well as making public
which States comply with the statutory requirements to submit
certification letters within two years of publication.
DOE does list the States that have filed certifications and those
that have or have not adopted new codes on the DOE Energy Efficiency
and Renewable Energy Web site at https://www.energycodes.gov/states/.
Once a State has adopted a new commercial code, DOE typically provides
software, training, and support for the new code as long as the new
code is based on the national model codes (in this case, ASHRAE
Standard 90.1).
The Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) submitted a written
comment (Docket No. EERE-2010-BT-DET-0050-0006, pgs. 1-2) agreeing with
and supporting the Department's preliminary determination that ASHRAE
Standard 90.1-2010 saves energy compared to ASHRAE 90.1-2007 and urges
the Department to finalize this determination.
II. Summary of the Comparative Analysis
DOE carried out both a detailed qualitative analysis and a broad
quantitative analysis of the differences between the requirements and
the stringencies in the 2007 and the 2010 editions.
A. Qualitative Analysis
1. Discussion of Detailed Textual Analysis
DOE performed a detailed analysis of the differences between the
textual requirements and stringencies of the 2007 and 2010 editions in
the scope of the standard, the building envelope requirements, the
building lighting and power requirements, and the building mechanical
equipment requirements.
The emphasis of DOE's detailed requirement and stringency analysis
was on looking at the specific changes that ASHRAE made in going from
Standard 90.1-2007 to Standard 90.1-2010. ASHRAE publishes changes to
their standards as addenda to the preceding standard and then bundles
all the addenda together to form the next edition. ASHRAE processed 109
addenda to Standard 90.1-2007 to create Standard 90.1-2010. Each of
these addenda was evaluated by DOE in preparing this final
determination. No changes were made to the final detailed textual
analysis from the preliminary detailed textual analysis.
In addition, each standard has multiple ways to demonstrate
compliance, including a prescriptive set of requirements by section of
the standard, various tradeoff approaches within those same sections,
and a whole building performance method (Energy Cost Budget or ECB).
For each addendum DOE identified whether it applies to the prescriptive
requirements, or one of the tradeoff paths provided for in the
envelope, lighting, or mechanical sections, or the ECB whole building
performance path. For each addendum DOE identified the impact on the
stringency for that path to compliance.
Overall, DOE found that that the vast majority of changes made to
Standard 90.1-2007 to create Standard 90.1-2010 were positive or
neutral (in the context of energy efficiency). Positive changes greatly
outweighed the negative energy efficiency changes. Specifically, of the
109 total changes:
56 were considered positive;
47 were considered neutral;
6 were considered negative.
The 56 positive changes greatly overwhelm the 6 negative changes in
terms of a simple numerical comparison. In addition, the 6 negative
changes were considered to be ``minor negatives'', with 19 of the
positive changes being considered ``major positive'' and an additional
37 positive changes being considered ``minor positive''. Not only do
the positive changes outweigh the negative changes in raw numbers, but
also in terms of the estimated impact.
2. Results of Detailed Textual Analysis
Table 1 presents the results of DOE's addendum-by-addendum analysis
of Standard 90.1-2010. Table 6 is a reformatted and slightly modified
version of a table in the preliminary qualitative analysis. The
complete preliminary qualitative analysis may be found on the DOE codes
Web site at https://www.energycodes.gov/status/determinations_com.stm.
Table 1--Results of Addendum-by-Addendum Analysis
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Addendum to
No. standard 90.1- Section affected Description of Impact on energy
2007 changes efficiency and reason
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1............................. A............... 6. Heating, Remove closed cooling 0 (clarifies that
Ventilating, tower requirements requirements do not
and Air from 6.8.1G. apply to closed
Conditioning. cooling towers).
[[Page 64908]]
2............................. B............... 6. Heating, Revises exception a Minor--(allows larger
Ventilating, to section 6.5.2.3 minimum ventilation
and Air to allow for codes rates if required by
Conditioning. other than ASHRAE other codes).
62.1 to dictate
minimum ventilation
rates.
3............................. C............... 6. Heating, Adds vivarium to list Minor--(allows
Ventilating, of spaces that exception to
and Air require specific dehumidification
Conditioning. humidity levels to controls for
satisfy process vivariums).
needs.
4............................. D............... 3. Definitions, Adds exceptions for Major + (requires
Abbreviations, Solar Heat Gain daylighting controls
and Acronyms; Coefficient (SHGC) under skylights and
5. Building and Visible commissioning of
Envelope; 9. Transmittance (VT) daylighting
Lighting. requirements for controls).
skylights; adds
requirement for
including visible
light transmittance
test results with
construction
documents; adds
information on
determining daylit
area under
skylights, automatic
daylighting controls
(with exceptions),
and submittal
requirements.
5............................. E............... 6. Heating, Changes exhaust air Major + (increased
Ventilating, energy recovery use of heat
and Air requirements and recovery).
Conditioning. harmonizes
requirements in
simplified section
6.3.2 with
requirements in the
6.5 prescriptive
path.
6............................. F............... 5. Building Requires high albedo Major + (requires
Envelope. roofs in hot cool roofs in hot
climates. climates)
7............................. G............... 3. Definitions, Updates building Minor + (increases
Abbreviations, envelope criteria envelope
and Acronyms; for metal buildings. requirements for
5. Building metal buildings).
Envelope.
8............................. H............... 6. Heating, Adds another Minor + (allows
Ventilating, exception to Section another exception
and Air 6.5.2.1 Limitation that saves energy in
Conditioning. of Simultaneous some applications).
Heating and Cooling.
The exception
addresses apparent
conflict between
standards and allows
users to achieve
comfort, meet the
code, and save
energy.
9............................. I............... 9. Lighting..... Applies a four-zone Major + (lowers
lighting power illuminance
density approach to requirements in
exterior lighting certain zones).
requirements.
Deletes the 5%
additional power
allowance in 9.4.5
and replaces it with
a base wattage
allowance per site.
Defines the four
zones and applies
the appropriate
requirements.
10............................ J............... 6. Heating, Updates the 0 (updating
Ventilating, mechanical test references).
and Air procedures
Conditioning; references in the
12. Normative standard. The
References; changes also modify
Appendix E. a reference in Table
Informative 6.8.1E, the
References. normative references
in Chapter 12, and
the informative
references in
Informative Appendix
E.
11............................ K............... 6. Heating, Updates Tables 6.8.1E 0 (updating tables to
Ventilating, and 7.8 to identify reflect current
and Air specific sections of federal standards).
Conditioning. referenced
standards. Table 7.8
also reflects the
current federal
efficiency levels
for residential
water heaters and
adds a requirement
for electric table-
top water heaters.
12............................ L............... 6. Heating, Adds minimum 0 (Requirement
Ventilating, efficiency and codifies industry
and Air certification standard practice).
Conditioning. requirements for
axial and
centrifugal fan
closed-circuit
cooling towers. Also
adds a reference to
ATC-105S, The
Cooling Technology
Institute test
standard for closed-
circuit cooling
towers to Section 12.
13............................ M............... 6. Heating, Updates chiller Major + (updates
Ventilating, efficiency chiller efficiency
and Air requirements. requirements).
Conditioning. Establishes
additional path of
compliance for water-
cooled chillers.
Combines all water-
cooled chillers into
one category and
adds a new size
category for
centrifugal chillers
at or above 600 tons.
14............................ N............... 6. Heating, Extends Variable Air Major + (extends
Ventilating, Volume (VAV) fan control requirements
and Air control requirements to another equipment
Conditioning. to large single-zone class).
units.
15............................ O............... 8. Power........ Modifies the scope of 0 (implements Federal
Section 8 and adds efficiency standards
requirements for transformers).
specific to low
voltage dry-type
distribution
transformers.
16............................ P............... 6. Heating, Provides pressure Minor--(increases
Ventilating, credits for allowable pressure
and Air laboratory exhaust drop in laboratory
Conditioning. systems that allow exhaust systems).
prescriptive
compliance with the
standard.
[[Page 64909]]
17............................ Q............... 5. Building Vestibules, remove Minor + (applies
Envelope. CZ4 exception. vestibule
requirement in more
locations).
18............................ R............... Informative Changes Informative 0 (performance rating
Appendix G. Appendix G method only).
Performance Performance Rating
Rating Method. Method into a
Normative Appendix.
Additionally, some
language has been
modified to make the
Appendix Enforceable.
19............................ S............... 6. Heating, Updates the 0 (replaces
Ventilating, Coefficient of Integrated Part Load
and Air Performance (COP) at Value (IPLV) with
Conditioning. 17 [deg]F efficiency Energy Efficiency
levels for Ratio(EER) to
commercial heat capture part load
pumps and introduces performance).
a new part-load
energy efficiency
descriptor (IEER)
for all commercial
unitary products
above 65,000 Btu/h
of cooling capacity.
20............................ T............... 6. Heating, Removes the term 0 (clarification of
Ventilating, ``replacement'' and definitions).
and Air ``new construction''
Conditioning. from the product
classes listed in
Table 6.8.1D and
replaces them with
the terms
``nonstandard size''
and ``standard
size'' to clarify
that one product
class is intended
for applications
with nonstandard
size exterior wall
openings while the
other is intended
for applications
with standard size
exterior wall
openings. Also
amends section
6.4.1.5.2 and
footnote b to Table
6.8.1D to clarify
that nonstandard
size packaged
terminal equipment
have sleeves with an
external wall
opening less than 16
in. high or less
than 42 in. wide to
reflect existing
applications where
the wall opening is
not necessarily less
than 16 in. high and
less than 42 in.
wide. However, to
avoid a potential
abuse of the
definition,
nonstandard size
packaged terminal
equipment are
required to have a
cross-sectional area
of the sleeves less
than 670 in\2\.
21............................ U............... 6. Heating, Adds a new section Minor + (applies
Ventilating, requiring cooling tower
and Air centrifugal fan open- requirements more
Conditioning. circuit cooling broadly).
towers over 1100 gpm
at the rating
conditions to meet
efficiency
requirements for
axial fan units
found in 6.8.1G.
22............................ V............... 6. Heating, Revises section 0 (updates
Ventilating, 6.4.2.1 to reference references).
and Air ANSI/ASHRAE/ACCA
Conditioning; Standard 183-2007
12. Normative for sizing heating
References. and cooling system
design loads. Adds
requirements for
calculating pump
head.
23............................ W............... Normative Changes footnote to 0 (performance rating
Appendix G. Table G3.1.1A to method).
Performance make it clear that
Rating Method. Exception a to
Section G3.1.1 also
applies here.
Changes the
exception to
G3.1.2.10 on Exhaust
Air Energy Recovery
for multifamily
buildings because
they are unlikely to
have a centralized
exhaust air system
needed to
effectively recover
heat.
24............................ X............... 9. Lighting..... Updates requirements Major + (adds
for automatic occupancy sensor
lighting shutoff, requirements for
adds specific many specific
occupancy sensor applications).
applications, and
provides additional
clarification.
25............................ Y............... 7. Service Water Establishes ARI 1160 Minor + (requires COP
Heating. as the test be met at lower
procedure for heat temperature).
pump pool heaters
and requires that
the minimum COP of 4
be met at the low
outdoor temperature
of 50 [deg]F.
26............................ Aa.............. 9. Lighting..... Adds space exceptions Minor + (limits
for automatic automatic-on
lighting controls. controls to specific
space types).
27............................ Ab.............. 3. Definitions, Adds definitions and Major + (adds
Abbreviations, provides daylighting daylighting control
and Acronyms; control requirements requirements for
and 9. Lighting. for side-lighted side-lighted
spaces. spaces).
[[Page 64910]]
28............................ Ac.............. 3. Definitions, Adds incentives to 0 (alternate
Abbreviations, use advanced compliance path).
and Acronyms; lighting controls.
9. Lighting.
29............................ Ad.............. 6. Heating, Includes 0 (documentation
Ventilating, certification only).
and Air requirements for
Conditioning. liquid-to-liquid
heat exchangers to
benefit both
manufacturers and
consumers, allow
product comparisons,
and provide
incentives to
manufacturers to
improve efficiency
in order to gain
market share.
30............................ Ae.............. 6. Heating, Adds a requirement Minor + (reduced heat
Ventilating, for insulating the loss in radiant
and Air surfaces of radiant panels).
Conditioning. panels that do not
face conditioned
spaces.
31............................ Af.............. 6. Heating, Provides requirement Minor + (requires
Ventilating, for designers, proper hydronic
and Air contractors, and system sizing).
Conditioning. owners to properly
size system piping
(hydronic systems)
to balance ongoing
energy costs and
first costs.
32............................ Ag.............. 5. Building Adds requirement for Minor + (reduces
Envelope. rigid board potential for
insulation overlap. thermal bridging).
33............................ Ai.............. Normative Removes requirement 0 (alternative
Appendix G. for comparing compliance path).
Performance proposed buildings
Rating Method. utilizing chilled
water with a
baseline building
with on-site
chillers, and
instead requires a
baseline that also
uses purchased
chilled water.
Details
modifications to be
made to the baseline
HVAC systems when
purchased chilled
water or heat are
included.
34............................ Aj.............. 10. Other Updates the text and 0 (implements Federal
Equipment. table of Chapter 10 motor requirements).
to comply with new
federal law for
motors rated at 1.0
horsepower and
greater. Adding this
information will
help designers, end-
use customers, and
code officials with
motor specifications
and verifications.
35............................ Ak.............. 6. Heating, Adds a pump isolation Minor + (reduces
Ventilating, requirement for pumping energy).
and Air systems with
Conditioning. multiple chillers
and boilers and
temperature reset
requirement for
equipment with a
minimum Btu/h.
Revises wording to
have requirements of
6.5.4.1 apply only
to cooling systems.
Changes threshold of
variable speed
systems to 7.5 HP.
Adds requirement for
differential
pressure reset. Does
not preclude also
implementing chilled
water supply
temperature setpoint
reset. Includes
requirements for
hydronic Heat Pump
and Water-Cooled
Unitary Air
Conditioners.
36............................ Al.............. 5. Building Adds skylight Major + (requires
Envelope. requirements in skylights and
certain space types daylighting in some
(enclosed spaces) to building types.
promote daylighting
energy savings.
37............................ Am.............. 5. Building Revise air leakage Minor + (decreased
Envelope. criteria for air leakage).
fenestration and
doors.
38............................ An.............. 5. Building Expands table of 0 (updates default
Envelope. default U-values for tables).
single-digit rafter
roofs.
39............................ Ao.............. 6. Heating, Repairs know errata 0 (editorial only).
Ventilating, to Table 6.8.1E and
and Air